Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 176William Blackwood, 1904 - England |
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Page 9
... cause he chose to shut them whole scheme - the overwhelm- from it . ing , insistent desire to manifest his power , that desire that is the salvation or the ruin of every strong man who has once realised his strength . Supremacy was the ...
... cause he chose to shut them whole scheme - the overwhelm- from it . ing , insistent desire to manifest his power , that desire that is the salvation or the ruin of every strong man who has once realised his strength . Supremacy was the ...
Page 11
... cause . He could no more have given reason for his sensation than he could have told the precise date upon which , coming down- stairs at eight o'clock , he had first found her waiting break- fast for him . The time when all such ...
... cause . He could no more have given reason for his sensation than he could have told the precise date upon which , coming down- stairs at eight o'clock , he had first found her waiting break- fast for him . The time when all such ...
Page 20
... contradiction or confirmation of the news reported from Persia . The question and its tone caused an audible stir . It was the signal for which the House had waited . Immediately after his demand there was a 20 [ July John Chilcote , M.P..
... contradiction or confirmation of the news reported from Persia . The question and its tone caused an audible stir . It was the signal for which the House had waited . Immediately after his demand there was a 20 [ July John Chilcote , M.P..
Page 25
... cause of the delay ; instead , by that magnetic attraction that undoubtedly exists , he looked directly in front of him at the group of people waiting on the little island - at one man who leant against the lamp - post in an attitude of ...
... cause of the delay ; instead , by that magnetic attraction that undoubtedly exists , he looked directly in front of him at the group of people waiting on the little island - at one man who leant against the lamp - post in an attitude of ...
Page 26
... cause we can only do it in two ways , by buying it or by steal- ing it ; and , " he continued , " I don't approve of stealing it , and we can't afford to buy it . " And following this up a little farther , Mr Samuel Smith has clearly ...
... cause we can only do it in two ways , by buying it or by steal- ing it ; and , " he continued , " I don't approve of stealing it , and we can't afford to buy it . " And following this up a little farther , Mr Samuel Smith has clearly ...
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Common terms and phrases
Aberdeen Alfred de Musset Aranmore asked Bain Bain's Benares boat British camphor carried Chilcote Chilcote's Chinese colour dark dead Duncan English eyes face Fanie fire fish France French George Sand Government Grosvenor Square guns hand head heart horse hour Howmore Indian interest island Japanese jemadar JOHN CHILCOTE Kaffirs Katje Keelung knew labour lake land landlord light live Loch Loch Fyne Loder looked Lord George Lord George Bentinck M'Coll mahout Margaret matter ment miles mind morning ness never night officer once party passed political Prussia river rose round Russian sahib Saulteaux Scotland sea-trout seemed sepoys Shisha side Sikhs silence Stoffel stood Taipeh tell thing thought tidal tion told took Transvaal trout turned voice Vrouw Grobelaar waiting whole wind words young