Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 142William Blackwood, 1887 - England |
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Results 6-10 of 81
Page 64
... brought the sisters to the balcony of the summer - house , and as they leaned over to greet their lovers , the young men instinctively paused to admire the beauty of the pic- ture they made . Their light and graceful forms , clothed ...
... brought the sisters to the balcony of the summer - house , and as they leaned over to greet their lovers , the young men instinctively paused to admire the beauty of the pic- ture they made . Their light and graceful forms , clothed ...
Page 75
... brought into direct relations to English , and be so used as to become the foundation of the pupil's thought and know- ledge in all the great human sub- jects of instruction . I would now reverse the picture , and point out how ...
... brought into direct relations to English , and be so used as to become the foundation of the pupil's thought and know- ledge in all the great human sub- jects of instruction . I would now reverse the picture , and point out how ...
Page 89
... brought home to the right person , and rendering malversation next to impossible . There is yet another member of this long - forgotten military hier- archy of whom it is necessary to say something , though of him the Royal ...
... brought home to the right person , and rendering malversation next to impossible . There is yet another member of this long - forgotten military hier- archy of whom it is necessary to say something , though of him the Royal ...
Page 97
... brought forward completely mystify . When busi- ness is carried on after this fashion , a numerous staff of clerks is abso- lutely necessary , though the exact figure at which Lord Randolph places them may well cause the uninitiated to ...
... brought forward completely mystify . When busi- ness is carried on after this fashion , a numerous staff of clerks is abso- lutely necessary , though the exact figure at which Lord Randolph places them may well cause the uninitiated to ...
Page 106
... brought up in the austere seriousness of a family of Evangelical principles ; and contrary to the wont of so many , who have been repelled and revolted by that form of faith , it was to something of the same at- mosphere that he ...
... brought up in the austere seriousness of a family of Evangelical principles ; and contrary to the wont of so many , who have been repelled and revolted by that form of faith , it was to something of the same at- mosphere that he ...
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able arms army Austria Axel Munthe beautiful believe Bellendean better called Captain Church Colonel course cried CXLII.-NO daugh dear delightful door doubt England English eyes face fact father feeling felt force French friends German girl give Gladstone Government hand Hayward head heart honour Ireland Irish Janet Joyce Joyce's kind King knew lady land LĂ©opoldville Liberal Unionists live look Lord Lord Castlereagh Lord Hartington Lord Palmerston means ment military mind Miss natural ness never night officers once Parliament party passed perhaps Poland present question river round Russia scarcely Scotland seemed Serk side sion Sir Charles Dilke Sitwell speak standing stood strange sure Taplow tell thing thought tion took turned Vistula voice War Office wife woman wonder words young