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 268
... mean- while recognised that he had taken the wrong path , and felt that he was greatly in danger of finding the ground on which he had advanced sink from under him . It was necessary to hush up the matter , in order to prevent it from ...
... mean- while recognised that he had taken the wrong path , and felt that he was greatly in danger of finding the ground on which he had advanced sink from under him . It was necessary to hush up the matter , in order to prevent it from ...
Page 294
... mean thing to do . Corner re- torted that Gradenigo was always dining out , but never himself gave any one so much as a drink of water from a bucket . Gradenigo , who was famed for his hospitality , instantly invited all those present ...
... mean thing to do . Corner re- torted that Gradenigo was always dining out , but never himself gave any one so much as a drink of water from a bucket . Gradenigo , who was famed for his hospitality , instantly invited all those present ...
Page 295
... means the beginning of the new rather than the end of the old prefer to dwell upon its second half . In literature no poet of the first rank found full scope within the sheepfolds of Arcadia except Metastasio ; and even he wrote a ...
... means the beginning of the new rather than the end of the old prefer to dwell upon its second half . In literature no poet of the first rank found full scope within the sheepfolds of Arcadia except Metastasio ; and even he wrote a ...
Page 304
... means taken to combat it ; to consider whether these means have been adequate or not ; and to try to draw some conclusions which may not only be helpful in future wars , but may be applicable to ordinary peace - time civil life . It has ...
... means taken to combat it ; to consider whether these means have been adequate or not ; and to try to draw some conclusions which may not only be helpful in future wars , but may be applicable to ordinary peace - time civil life . It has ...
Page 305
... means used to attain the end in view , namely , the reduction of one's opponent to such a state that he is incapable ... mean time , however , an indication of the state of affairs may be gleaned from the following statistics , which ...
... means used to attain the end in view , namely , the reduction of one's opponent to such a state that he is incapable ... mean time , however , an indication of the state of affairs may be gleaned from the following statistics , which ...
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