The Quarterly Review, Volume 233, Issue 463William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1920 |
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Page 305
... enemy . The destruction of the opponent's morale is the prelude to his defeat . In the army , just as in civil life , disease is bound to occur to a greater or less extent . But , while wounds are inevitable , disease is in some degree ...
... enemy . The destruction of the opponent's morale is the prelude to his defeat . In the army , just as in civil life , disease is bound to occur to a greater or less extent . But , while wounds are inevitable , disease is in some degree ...
Page 313
... enemy and sitting down to trench warfare is of any avail . What is needed and what alone will bring success is an energetic offensive . The combative spirit must be cultivated , and a well - thought - out , well - balanced and ...
... enemy and sitting down to trench warfare is of any avail . What is needed and what alone will bring success is an energetic offensive . The combative spirit must be cultivated , and a well - thought - out , well - balanced and ...
Page 314
... enemies are prostitution and drunken- ness ; these must be stamped out with ruthless vigour . It is only making bricks without straw to attempt to diminish the incidence of venereal disease without 314 VENEREAL DISEASE IN WAR.
... enemies are prostitution and drunken- ness ; these must be stamped out with ruthless vigour . It is only making bricks without straw to attempt to diminish the incidence of venereal disease without 314 VENEREAL DISEASE IN WAR.
Page 336
... enemy was still demoralised . Anxious to make up for its enforced idleness during the past year , the Company had no fewer than ten big ships laden with merchandise to the value of over a million sterling - double the usual amount ...
... enemy was still demoralised . Anxious to make up for its enforced idleness during the past year , the Company had no fewer than ten big ships laden with merchandise to the value of over a million sterling - double the usual amount ...
Page 337
... enemy . Assisted by these propitious conditions , the French captured the market from which we were cut off . During the next three years things improved some- what , and the Peace of Ryswick ( 1697 ) came as a great boon to our ...
... enemy . Assisted by these propitious conditions , the French captured the market from which we were cut off . During the next three years things improved some- what , and the Peace of Ryswick ( 1697 ) came as a great boon to our ...
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