The Quarterly Review, Volume 224William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1915 |
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Page 28
... followed the coast route by Fano , in fulfilment of a vow previously made , to return thanks for help and protection which he believed he had received . About two years earlier , towards the close of his long imprisonment , his health ...
... followed the coast route by Fano , in fulfilment of a vow previously made , to return thanks for help and protection which he believed he had received . About two years earlier , towards the close of his long imprisonment , his health ...
Page 29
... followed him from Bologna , and now , with great baseness , employed every imaginable artifice and deception to entice the poet outside the city boundaries ; intending to have him put into a litter , bound if necessary , and so conveyed ...
... followed him from Bologna , and now , with great baseness , employed every imaginable artifice and deception to entice the poet outside the city boundaries ; intending to have him put into a litter , bound if necessary , and so conveyed ...
Page 41
... followed the imprisonment are distin- guished by a literary output , of prose as well as poetry , equal in quality and quantity to that of any writer who has already produced his magnum opus ; also by a struggle with misfortune ...
... followed the imprisonment are distin- guished by a literary output , of prose as well as poetry , equal in quality and quantity to that of any writer who has already produced his magnum opus ; also by a struggle with misfortune ...
Page 52
... followed by a sitting under that writ , creates a barony descendible to the heirs of the party summoned and sitting . It is not easy to find a formula which shall express this doctrine in its present extended form ; Sir Francis Palmer ...
... followed by a sitting under that writ , creates a barony descendible to the heirs of the party summoned and sitting . It is not easy to find a formula which shall express this doctrine in its present extended form ; Sir Francis Palmer ...
Page 55
... followed . This is by no means the only point that I have deemed it necessary to criticise in the Mowbray and Segrave cases ( 1877 ) ; and it is not improbable that , sooner than any one imagines , the attention of the House may have to ...
... followed . This is by no means the only point that I have deemed it necessary to criticise in the Mowbray and Segrave cases ( 1877 ) ; and it is not improbable that , sooner than any one imagines , the attention of the House may have to ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abbasid Abydos Adriatic Allies army attack Austria Bank barony belligerent blockade Britain British caliph cent century civilisation claims Committee contraband course Dalmatia Dardanelles Declaration of London defence Dniester effect Empire enemy England English evidence expenditure export fact Fatimid favour fishermen fishing fleet force foreign France French Galicia Gallery German Giolitti Government Greek hand Hellespont Illyria important industry Iņes inshore fisheries interest Istria Italian Italy King large number less London Lord manufacturers ment methods military months Moslem motor naval neutral port never Nietzsche Omayyad operations organisation Parliament patriotism peace Pedro peerage Peerage Law poetry political position present produce proved question railway realise rendered Russian Sestos ships shore Slavs spirit Stryj submarines success supply Tasso Tate Gallery things tion trade Trieste troops vehicles vessel Vistula wheat whole words
Popular passages
Page 405 - unforgettable effect with so little effort as in ' His Mate': '" Hi-diddle-diddle The cat and the fiddle." . . . I raised my head, And saw him seated on a heap of dead, Yelling the nursery-tune. Grimacing at the moon. . . . " And the cow jumped over the moon. The little dog laughed to see such sport And the dish ran away with the spoon.
Page 217 - nothing in our laws, or in the law of nations, that forbids our citizens from sending . . . munitions of war to foreign ports for sale. It is a commercial adventure which no nation is bound to prohibit, and which only exposes the persons engaged in it to the penalty of confiscation.
Page 218 - Hague Convention XIII of 1907: ' A neutral Government is bound to employ the means at its disposal to prevent the fitting out or arming of any vessel within its jurisdiction, which it has reason to believe is intended to cruise, or engage in hostile operations, against a Power with which
Page 320 - Tearfulness and trembling are come upon me, And horror hath overwhelmed me. And I said, Oh that I had wings like a dove! For then would I fly away, and be at rest. Lo, then I would wander far off, And remain in the wilderness.
Page 415 - what the dead have given us who gave their everything to England : ' gave up the years to be Of work and joy, and that unhoped serene, That men call age; and those who would have been, Their sons, they gave, their immortality.
Page 591 - be put in jeopardy by the capture or destruction of unarmed merchantmen, and recognise also, as all other nations do, the obligation to take the usual precaution of visit and search to ascertain whether a suspected merchantman is in fact of belligerent nationality or is in fact carrying contraband under a neutral flag.
Page 62 - in that he most intendeth, that it needeth not to be stood upon. It is enough to point at it; that no nation, which doth not directly profess arms, may look to have greatness fall into their mouths.' A state, therefore, ' ought to have those laws or customs, which may reach forth unto them just occasions of war.
Page 591 - that the Imperial Government accept as a matter of course, the rule that the lives of noncombatants, whether they be of neutral citizenship or citizens of one of the nations at war, cannot lawfully or rightfully be put in jeopardy by the capture or destruction of unarmed merchantmen,
Page 216 - a neutral Power is not bound to prevent the export, or transit, on behalf of either belligerent, of arms, munitions of war, or in general of anything which could be of use to an army or fleet.
Page 62 - Above all, for empire and greatness, it importeth most, that a nation do profess arms, as their principal honour, study, and occupation. For the things which we formerly have spoken of are but habilitations towards arms; and what is