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 254
... given it more strength and vitality - because he had not succeeded in transforming it forthwith into a defensive alliance between the two powers - threw up his embassy and left London , abandoning his godchild to its fate . Fortune ...
... given it more strength and vitality - because he had not succeeded in transforming it forthwith into a defensive alliance between the two powers - threw up his embassy and left London , abandoning his godchild to its fate . Fortune ...
Page 257
... given him some uneasy moments . Master as he generally was of his words , he did not attempt to conceal , and in any case did not succeed in concealing , the vexation and dis- appointment he felt on account of what , in his dispatch to ...
... given him some uneasy moments . Master as he generally was of his words , he did not attempt to conceal , and in any case did not succeed in concealing , the vexation and dis- appointment he felt on account of what , in his dispatch to ...
Page 267
... given him in connexion with the negotiations concerning the Spanish Marriages , did not overlook the importance of guarding himself from the rear , of putting Guizot on a false scent and of reassuring himself as to his intentions ...
... given him in connexion with the negotiations concerning the Spanish Marriages , did not overlook the importance of guarding himself from the rear , of putting Guizot on a false scent and of reassuring himself as to his intentions ...
Page 268
... given him the results he desired , and changed his tone . Friendly counsels and recommenda- tions took the place of what had appeared severe in his orders . He thus tried to minimise the consequences his communication might have , and ...
... given him the results he desired , and changed his tone . Friendly counsels and recommenda- tions took the place of what had appeared severe in his orders . He thus tried to minimise the consequences his communication might have , and ...
Page 281
... given to the historians by the Orientalists , i.e. the Arabic and Armenian scholars and the specialists in the Georgian and Coptic languages . The study of Byzantium forms one with the study of the East . At the same time close ...
... given to the historians by the Orientalists , i.e. the Arabic and Armenian scholars and the specialists in the Georgian and Coptic languages . The study of Byzantium forms one with the study of the East . At the same time close ...
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