The Quarterly Review, Volume 238William 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, 1922 |
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Page 6
... moral reforms much was wanted when he took the reins ; and this was perhaps the point which most exercised those who had deprecated his appointment . Things had been going downhill ; there were some who could not , others who would not ...
... moral reforms much was wanted when he took the reins ; and this was perhaps the point which most exercised those who had deprecated his appointment . Things had been going downhill ; there were some who could not , others who would not ...
Page 14
... moral forces to which the contending forces could appeal outside the Conference . We agree with Major Temperley that the truly om- niscient historian , in writing of any question thus decided , would explain the decision by analysing ex ...
... moral forces to which the contending forces could appeal outside the Conference . We agree with Major Temperley that the truly om- niscient historian , in writing of any question thus decided , would explain the decision by analysing ex ...
Page 21
... moral persuasion . Unless the principal Allies were prepared to embark on a whole series of wars in Eastern Europe against their own clients and coadjutors , they were bound to frame the new treaties on lines which would more or less ...
... moral persuasion . Unless the principal Allies were prepared to embark on a whole series of wars in Eastern Europe against their own clients and coadjutors , they were bound to frame the new treaties on lines which would more or less ...
Page 25
... expressing the desire and the intention of both parties to secure ' good intellectual and moral relations between the two peoples . ' These two treaties are duly recorded in the Peace History THE CONFERENCE OF PARIS 25.
... expressing the desire and the intention of both parties to secure ' good intellectual and moral relations between the two peoples . ' These two treaties are duly recorded in the Peace History THE CONFERENCE OF PARIS 25.
Page 32
... moral exercise , for it is not to be practised except with equal honesty and sensitiveness , equal kind- ness and confidence ; but the natural difficulty of applying critical principles to a dead artist is slight in comparison with that ...
... moral exercise , for it is not to be practised except with equal honesty and sensitiveness , equal kind- ness and confidence ; but the natural difficulty of applying critical principles to a dead artist is slight in comparison with that ...
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