The Quarterly Review, Volume 102William 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, 1857 |
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Page 162
... person convicted of this crime , who are sixty or upwards , are to suffer death , however innocent . Family allegiance and respect for age are the strongest principles of a Chinese . The knowledge that his guilt will sacrifice the lives ...
... person convicted of this crime , who are sixty or upwards , are to suffer death , however innocent . Family allegiance and respect for age are the strongest principles of a Chinese . The knowledge that his guilt will sacrifice the lives ...
Page 380
... person slain , at the door of whose tent the homicide kills one of the camels to show that the blood between them is washed out . The friends of both then feast upon the flesh , and the ceremony is completed by the homicide walking ...
... person slain , at the door of whose tent the homicide kills one of the camels to show that the blood between them is washed out . The friends of both then feast upon the flesh , and the ceremony is completed by the homicide walking ...
Page 478
... person in a semicircle of which the pulpit was the centre , found that he could be easily heard by a congregation of upwards of thirty thousand people . His voice was as captivating as it was powerful . Franklin states that it produced ...
... person in a semicircle of which the pulpit was the centre , found that he could be easily heard by a congregation of upwards of thirty thousand people . His voice was as captivating as it was powerful . Franklin states that it produced ...
Contents
History of the Irish PoorLaw in connexion with | 59 |
British Tea Plantations in the Himalaya with a Nar | 126 |
32 | 170 |
Copyright | |
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