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| | Tract Number 71 |
 | | And further, there will ever be a number of refined and affectionate minds, who, disappointed in finding full matter for their devotional feelings in the English system, as at present conducted, betake themselves, through human frailty, to Rome. |
 | | There are a number of arguments which are scarcely more than ingenious exhibitions, such as would be admired in any game where skill is every thing., but which as arguments tell only with those on our own side, while an adversary thinks them unfair. |
 | | They are a number of concordant witnesses to certain definite truths, and while their testimony is one and the same from the very first moment they publicly utter it, so on the other hand, if there be bodies which speak otherwise, we can show historically that they rose later than the Apostles. |
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