The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volume 219A. Constable, 1914 |
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Page 2
... clear - cut statement of the skilful publicist who is the Bombay correspondent of the same journal . Writing in ' The Times ' of the 19th of April 1913 , when Moslem feeling was at its height and had not been mollified by 2 Jan. THE ...
... clear - cut statement of the skilful publicist who is the Bombay correspondent of the same journal . Writing in ' The Times ' of the 19th of April 1913 , when Moslem feeling was at its height and had not been mollified by 2 Jan. THE ...
Page 5
... clear out , Indian Moslems asked in vain what British interests would be served by turning Turkey out of Adrianople and installing the Bulgarians against the wishes of the inhabitants . I have a firm conviction that if important British ...
... clear out , Indian Moslems asked in vain what British interests would be served by turning Turkey out of Adrianople and installing the Bulgarians against the wishes of the inhabitants . I have a firm conviction that if important British ...
Page 9
... clearly knowing what it wants , and greatly perplexed and disheartened by such questions as the treatment of Indians in South Africa , greatly anxious and worried about the future of Indians in East Africa and in the island of Zanzibar ...
... clearly knowing what it wants , and greatly perplexed and disheartened by such questions as the treatment of Indians in South Africa , greatly anxious and worried about the future of Indians in East Africa and in the island of Zanzibar ...
Page 12
... clearly advantageous that Indians studying outside their own country should come here to absorb English ideas at first hand , rather than spend their most impressionable years elsewhere . An even more serious matter is the treatment of ...
... clearly advantageous that Indians studying outside their own country should come here to absorb English ideas at first hand , rather than spend their most impressionable years elsewhere . An even more serious matter is the treatment of ...
Page 18
... clearly before us and will not be averted by any diatribes . The proposition cannot be proved , but it seems to be consonant with our common experience . If all women have something in them of the male , those who have a strong ...
... clearly before us and will not be averted by any diatribes . The proposition cannot be proved , but it seems to be consonant with our common experience . If all women have something in them of the male , those who have a strong ...
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Popular passages
Page 100 - He who begins by loving Christianity better than Truth, will proceed by loving his own sect or Church better than Christianity, and end in loving himself better than all.
Page 228 - States which have undergone a change of government due to revolution, the results of which threaten other States, ipso facto, cease to be members of the European Alliance, and remain excluded from it until their situation gives guarantees for legal order and stability. If, owing to such alterations, immediate danger threatens other States, the Powers bind themselves, by peaceful means, or if need be by arms, to bring back the guilty State into the bosom of the Great Alliance.
Page 228 - The people of the United States have a vital interest in the cause of popular self-government.
Page 226 - It cannot be too often and too emphatically asserted that the United States has not the slightest desire for territorial aggrandizement at the expense of any of its southern neighbors, and will not treat the Monroe Doctrine as an excuse for such aggrandizement on its part.
Page 330 - C'est que la Liberté n'est pas une comtesse Du noble faubourg Saint-Germain, Une femme qu'un cri fait tomber en faiblesse, Qui met du blanc et du carmin : C'est une forte femme aux puissantes mamelles, A la voix rauque, aux durs appas...
Page 493 - God is our guide ! from field, from wave, From plough, from anvil, and from loom, We come, our country's rights to save, And speak a tyrant faction's doom : And hark ! we raise from sea to sea, The sacred watchword, Liberty.
Page 223 - The acquisition of San Domingo is an adherence to the " Monroe doctrine;" it is a measure of national protection ; it is asserting our just claim to a controlling influence over the great commercial traffic soon to flow from west to east, by way of the Isthmus of Darien...
Page 439 - That all further extension of territory or assumption of government, or new treaties offering any protection to native tribes, would be inexpedient...
Page 44 - Nous avouerons que notre héros était fort peu héros en ce moment. Toutefois, la peur ne venait chez lui qu'en seconde ligne; il était surtout scandalisé de ce bruit qui lui faisait mal aux oreilles.
Page 422 - I heard them both, and oh! I heard The song of every singing bird That sings beneath the sky, And with the song of lark and wren The song of mountains, moths and men And seas and rainbows vie!