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drawn from writers in almost every department of literature and science; from poets,
rhetoricians, philosophers, critics, historians, geographers; from writers on husbandry,
on medicine, on natural history, on grammar, on theology; from almost every form and style
of composition, romances, epistles, orations, fables, odes, epigrams, sermons, narratives;
from writers of various nations and religions, Pagan, Jew, and Christian, belonging to many
countries and through a long succession of ages.
In all, the word has retained its ground-meaning without change. From the earliest age of
Greek literature down to its close, a period of nearly two thousand years, not an example has
been found in which the word has any other meaning. There is no instance in which it signifies
to make a partial application of water by affusion or sprinkling, or to cleanse, to purify,
apart from the literal act of immersion as the means of cleansing or purifying. (lbid,
p. 933.)
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