The Quarterly Review, Volume 159William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1885 |
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Page 222
... language rather than to the weakness or untenable character of his real position , and to the language of his followers much more than to his own . He refused many things that had never been asked ; and others so accentuated and ...
... language rather than to the weakness or untenable character of his real position , and to the language of his followers much more than to his own . He refused many things that had never been asked ; and others so accentuated and ...
Page 442
... language . ' Both disputants agree that there is but one word , which each claims as decisive for his opinion - Benval , ( caput valli , the head of the wall ) : the val , on which the Antiquary relics as the Teutonic wall , being ...
... language . ' Both disputants agree that there is but one word , which each claims as decisive for his opinion - Benval , ( caput valli , the head of the wall ) : the val , on which the Antiquary relics as the Teutonic wall , being ...
Page 447
... language may be supposed not to have died out of the country for some time after the Danes and Norsemen began to plunder these islands . ' Here then we have another example of a primitive language giving way to that of a more civilized ...
... language may be supposed not to have died out of the country for some time after the Danes and Norsemen began to plunder these islands . ' Here then we have another example of a primitive language giving way to that of a more civilized ...
Contents
London 1884 | 450 |
Hansards Parliamentary Debates 18821884 | 480 |
And other Works | 499 |
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