The Quarterly Review, Volume 226John Murray, 1916 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 74
Page 8
... ships . Why not the Scæan ? asks Mr Leaf . Why should he propose to go from the south- eastern gate on the other side of the fortress and leading directly away from the sea ? ' It is true that , issuing by this gate , he would have some ...
... ships . Why not the Scæan ? asks Mr Leaf . Why should he propose to go from the south- eastern gate on the other side of the fortress and leading directly away from the sea ? ' It is true that , issuing by this gate , he would have some ...
Page 11
... ships of the Ægean Sea . When this is the case , the Trojan plain becomes of necessity the natural meeting place for the trade of the Ægean and the Euxine . . . . The passage of the Hellespont is easily closed against sailing ships by ...
... ships of the Ægean Sea . When this is the case , the Trojan plain becomes of necessity the natural meeting place for the trade of the Ægean and the Euxine . . . . The passage of the Hellespont is easily closed against sailing ships by ...
Page 14
... ships . Mr Leaf has submitted it to a merciless analysis , and it may safely be said that the combined forces of the unitarians will never rehabilitate the Catalogue as a document of significance for the Mycenæan age . It was composed ...
... ships . Mr Leaf has submitted it to a merciless analysis , and it may safely be said that the combined forces of the unitarians will never rehabilitate the Catalogue as a document of significance for the Mycenæan age . It was composed ...
Page 41
... ship if he , or at least none greater , was the pilot at the helm . Mr Masefield has paid some attention to details ; and in this respect he has the advantage of predecessors who have taken contemporaries of Pompey as subjects of their ...
... ship if he , or at least none greater , was the pilot at the helm . Mr Masefield has paid some attention to details ; and in this respect he has the advantage of predecessors who have taken contemporaries of Pompey as subjects of their ...
Page 49
... ships , troops and treasure . Cæsar , however , was now in Asia , and something must be done . The little force was moved to Syhedra , a small and obscure seaport not far from Selinus ( Selindi ) in Cilicia . Here was held the fateful ...
... ships , troops and treasure . Cæsar , however , was now in Asia , and something must be done . The little force was moved to Syhedra , a small and obscure seaport not far from Selinus ( Selindi ) in Cilicia . Here was held the fateful ...
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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