The Quarterly Review, Volume 235, Issue 467John Murray, 1921 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 41
Page 225
... interest to note that she came into being in obedience to the same law as her most recent namesake , and was , too , something of a new departure , as King Philip was informed . She was one of the guifts ' bestowed upon the country by ...
... interest to note that she came into being in obedience to the same law as her most recent namesake , and was , too , something of a new departure , as King Philip was informed . She was one of the guifts ' bestowed upon the country by ...
Page 230
... interest for the good of ship or shipmate . It follows that , in such cases there remains room for the entry of the grace by which the ' secondary means ' may be made ' availeable and beneficiall . ' Nothing is more characteristic of ...
... interest for the good of ship or shipmate . It follows that , in such cases there remains room for the entry of the grace by which the ' secondary means ' may be made ' availeable and beneficiall . ' Nothing is more characteristic of ...
Page 232
... interest in the broadest sense of the word . ' The Influence of the Sea Spirit on the use of Sea Power , is a work for another Mahan , and it will be even more worth study , if possible , than what he gave us . His countrymen may claim ...
... interest in the broadest sense of the word . ' The Influence of the Sea Spirit on the use of Sea Power , is a work for another Mahan , and it will be even more worth study , if possible , than what he gave us . His countrymen may claim ...
Page 248
... interests , and to exact reparation for any trans- gressions of international law by the whites . Only a wealthy country can be powerful by sea ; and a nation which has lost most of its foreign trade will not think it worth while to bid ...
... interests , and to exact reparation for any trans- gressions of international law by the whites . Only a wealthy country can be powerful by sea ; and a nation which has lost most of its foreign trade will not think it worth while to bid ...
Page 256
... interest in the land that he cultivates or in the produce that he raises , rather than successive increases in weekly wages , may prove the truer remedy for his unrest . From the three books , whose titles head these pages , may be ...
... interest in the land that he cultivates or in the produce that he raises , rather than successive increases in weekly wages , may prove the truer remedy for his unrest . From the three books , whose titles head these pages , may be ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
administration agricultural Allied Anatolian Railway Apocalypse army artistic Asia Asiatic Bagdad Railway Balkan Bulgaria capital Championnet co-operative common connexion considerable Constantinople Covenant criticism Croce danger democracy Deutsche Bank Dominions Dr Charles economic Eleonora Fonseca Europe European existence expression fact favour Ferdinand France French German Goethe Goethe's Greece hand idea Imperial individual industry influence interest Italy Jugo-Slavia King labour land League League of Nations less literary living ment methods million Minister Ministry Naples nations nature Neapolitan never organisation Paris Parthenopean Republic Peace poem poet political population possible present principle question races realised recognised regard representatives responsibility result Roumania self-government Serbia social societies South Africa spirit statesmen success theory tion trade Treaty of Neuilly Treaty of Sèvres Treaty Series Turkey Turkish Turkish Government union unity victory vote wages Weimar whole words writing