Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 176William Blackwood, 1904 - England |
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Page 11
... hold it when once grasped― are frequently the last to see into their own hearts . He looked at her admiringly ; he acknowledged the stir of his feeling ; but he made no attempt to define its cause . He could no more have given reason ...
... hold it when once grasped― are frequently the last to see into their own hearts . He looked at her admiringly ; he acknowledged the stir of his feeling ; but he made no attempt to define its cause . He could no more have given reason ...
Page 17
... hold . With a perception swifter than any he had experienced , he realised the certain respite to be gained by yielding to his impulse . He looked at Chilcote , with his haggard , anxious ex- pression , his eager , restless eyes ; and a ...
... hold . With a perception swifter than any he had experienced , he realised the certain respite to be gained by yielding to his impulse . He looked at Chilcote , with his haggard , anxious ex- pression , his eager , restless eyes ; and a ...
Page 27
... holds the field among our classical obiter dicta , for it expresses the undoubted fact that a man will work harder for himself than for other people , and will get all he can out of his land , and treat it with loving care , when he ...
... holds the field among our classical obiter dicta , for it expresses the undoubted fact that a man will work harder for himself than for other people , and will get all he can out of his land , and treat it with loving care , when he ...
Page 35
... hold- ings , involving a large number of buildings , or if his prede- cessor was poor and mean and let things run down , then the financial result may be con- siderably less favourable , and he may find himself , when he frames his ...
... hold- ings , involving a large number of buildings , or if his prede- cessor was poor and mean and let things run down , then the financial result may be con- siderably less favourable , and he may find himself , when he frames his ...
Page 40
... in their favour , and they recog- nise the two significant facts that nothing pays so ill as bad farming , and that the agricul- turist can only hold his own by trying as hard as he can for the best 40 [ July A Plea for Landlords .
... in their favour , and they recog- nise the two significant facts that nothing pays so ill as bad farming , and that the agricul- turist can only hold his own by trying as hard as he can for the best 40 [ July A Plea for Landlords .
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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