The Quarterly Review, Volume 226John Murray, 1916 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 69
Page 7
... appear why this gate should have been called Dardanian , even supposing that it had an alternative name . Another view is that Dardanian simply means Trojan , and that the phrase means all or any of the gates . This would suit the sense ...
... appear why this gate should have been called Dardanian , even supposing that it had an alternative name . Another view is that Dardanian simply means Trojan , and that the phrase means all or any of the gates . This would suit the sense ...
Page 12
... appears in a new and un- favourable light . We have to think of her as a parasite ; and no power is more offensive than one which , con- tributing nothing to the work of the world , exploits and feeds on the labours of others . To the ...
... appears in a new and un- favourable light . We have to think of her as a parasite ; and no power is more offensive than one which , con- tributing nothing to the work of the world , exploits and feeds on the labours of others . To the ...
Page 16
... appears in Homer . But , beyond the general setting and conditions , can we hope to discover in Homer anything of the nature of a true story ? An epic poem is not a chronicle . In a work in which Clio and Calliope have collaborated , it ...
... appears in Homer . But , beyond the general setting and conditions , can we hope to discover in Homer anything of the nature of a true story ? An epic poem is not a chronicle . In a work in which Clio and Calliope have collaborated , it ...
Page 18
... appear , seems to us to accord with other evidence and to afford the most satisfactory explanation of the data of the Iliad . If there had been any deep or radical distinc- tions between the Achæan and Trojan civilisations , it is ...
... appear , seems to us to accord with other evidence and to afford the most satisfactory explanation of the data of the Iliad . If there had been any deep or radical distinc- tions between the Achæan and Trojan civilisations , it is ...
Page 22
... appear likely that it will diminish . It is wholly uninfluenced by political changes or con- siderations . Amongst the Latin races , especially the Spaniards and Portuguese , on the other hand , there is a tendency to eliminate this ...
... appear likely that it will diminish . It is wholly uninfluenced by political changes or con- siderations . Amongst the Latin races , especially the Spaniards and Portuguese , on the other hand , there is a tendency to eliminate this ...
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Common terms and phrases
Achæans advance agricultural Allies army attack Austrian banks battle battleships Britain British Canal capital century China colonies connexion course Danube defence Disraeli Disraeli's Dobrudja Dominions East Eastern Egypt Empire enemy England English fact favour fighting fleet force foreign policy France French front Georgian Poetry German Government Greek guns hand harbour Heligoland Homer House Hughes Iliad Imperial important increased India industry interest Ireland Irish Volunteers Kiel Kiel Canal labour land less Lord Lucan ment miles natural naval never North Sea occupied Office opinion organisation Palestine Parliament passed peasant poet poetry political Pompey position possession present produce question railway realised reason recognised regard resolution result Rumanian Russian Senate Serbian Serbs ships small holdings South success Thiepval tion to-day trade Treitschke Trojan Trojan War troops Troy Turkish Volhynia whole Wilhelmshaven Wordsworth wounds Yuan Shih-kai