The Quarterly Review, Volume 66; Volume 84William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) John Murray, 1840 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 75
Page 115
... true Be- lievers , " said he , " in making sham ones , than you could have defiled between the Zab and Selamiyah . We have killed our horses and our- selves in carrying those accursed stones . " - p . 46 . Mr. Layard afterwards , during ...
... true Be- lievers , " said he , " in making sham ones , than you could have defiled between the Zab and Selamiyah . We have killed our horses and our- selves in carrying those accursed stones . " - p . 46 . Mr. Layard afterwards , during ...
Page 159
... true and great ! She is her master's true ' pupil in that : she knows what is really divine as well as he , and bows before it . She honours Dobbin in spite of his big feet ; she respects her husband more than ever she did before ...
... true and great ! She is her master's true ' pupil in that : she knows what is really divine as well as he , and bows before it . She honours Dobbin in spite of his big feet ; she respects her husband more than ever she did before ...
Page 354
... true , in the Abbruzzi , where Mr. Lear , himself taken for Pal- merstoni , found roast fox considered cibo squisito , the delicacy of the season . Our chase from beginning to end is modern and insular it belongs to us , and to us alone ...
... true , in the Abbruzzi , where Mr. Lear , himself taken for Pal- merstoni , found roast fox considered cibo squisito , the delicacy of the season . Our chase from beginning to end is modern and insular it belongs to us , and to us alone ...
Contents
Presbytery examined an Essay Critical and Historical | 78 |
Nineveh and its Remains By Austen Henry Layard | 106 |
Years By C H Hermes | 185 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
ancient animal appeared Assembly Assyrian Austria Austrian empire authority believe cabinet called carriages Catholic cattle character Christian Church clergy constitution course crown doubt Duke of Argyll Emperor empire engine England English establishments Euston Station fact favour feeling foreign France French friends German give Guizot hand head Hieover honour hoopoes horses House Hungary interest Italian Italy Jane Jane Eyre King labour ladies language Layard less letters London Lord Castlereagh Lord Palmerston LXXXIV Macaulay Macaulay's Magyars means ment mind minister monarchy moral Mosul Naples Natural Philosophy nature never Nineveh object observed Paris Parliament party persons political present Prince principles Prussia public instruction question race railway readers Reformation respect Revolution Roman seems signal-man Skerryvore sovereign spirit Station supposed tion truth Vienna Whig whole Yezidis