Citations:prologetic


 * 1855, Walter Murray Gibson, The Prison of Weltevreden; And a Glance at the East Indian Archipelago, Contents, page ix:
 * PROLOGETIC. Description of Prison of Weltevreden — Prisoner’s hopes of Release — Order of Re-arrest — Lonely Lady Musing at Sea — Revery broken by Wreck on Brower’s Shoals — A Clipper-Ship in Sunda Straits — Escaped Prisoner on Board — A Chase — Meeting of Prisoner and the Lady — Coincidence of Reveries — Brower the Sheriff, and Brower’s Shoals — The Palmer at Sea — Her Cabin Passengers — The Elder and Younger Missionaries, and their Wives — The Lady of the Revery — A Stout Man-of-War Boatswain, of whose great strength a tale is told — Curiosity of Passengers to hear the Story of the Escaped Prisoner, . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
 * 1873, A.V.S. Sligo (translator), R.F. Calixte (author), The Life of the Venerable , page 303:
 * The works translated from will be in most cases the Lives drawn up for or from the processes of canonisation or beatification, as being more full, more authentic, and more replete with anecdote, thus enabling the reader to become better acquainted with the Saint’s disposition and spirit; while the simple matter-of-fact style of the narrative is, from its unobtrusive character, more adapted for spiritual reading than the views and generalisations, and prologetic extenuations of more recent biographers.
 * 1928,, translating ’s Amphitheatrum Sapientiæ Æternæ (2nd ed., 1509), in The Secret Teachings of All Ages, Conclusion, page 203:
 * To this portal ascent is made by a mystic, indisputably prologetic, flight of steps, set before it as shown in the picture.