Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 149William Blackwood, 1891 - England |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 83
Page 94
... questions raised by that tremendous struggle , is one of the leading features of his career . It exhibited patriot- ism ... question was opened . The public law of Europe relating to it was the Treaty of 1856 , reaffirmed and ratified by ...
... questions raised by that tremendous struggle , is one of the leading features of his career . It exhibited patriot- ism ... question was opened . The public law of Europe relating to it was the Treaty of 1856 , reaffirmed and ratified by ...
Page 97
... question his own as completely as it had ever been Lord John Russell's , or as completely as finance has ever belonged to Mr Gladstone , or currency to Sir Robert Peel . He had always been dissatisfied with the Reform Act of 1832 , and ...
... question his own as completely as it had ever been Lord John Russell's , or as completely as finance has ever belonged to Mr Gladstone , or currency to Sir Robert Peel . He had always been dissatisfied with the Reform Act of 1832 , and ...
Page 99
... question and the vindication of public law . Mr Froude thinks that he stepped aside out of sheer win the hollow rewards of a coronet perversity to create Jingoism , and and a garter . He insists that Dis- raeli had come into office with ...
... question and the vindication of public law . Mr Froude thinks that he stepped aside out of sheer win the hollow rewards of a coronet perversity to create Jingoism , and and a garter . He insists that Dis- raeli had come into office with ...
Page 100
... question and then on another , under the temporary do- minion of convictions taken up for the occasion . He deliberately placed himself from the first on an intellectual and moral level from which he could easily retain his sense of ...
... question and then on another , under the temporary do- minion of convictions taken up for the occasion . He deliberately placed himself from the first on an intellectual and moral level from which he could easily retain his sense of ...
Page 107
... question the child as to what had happened . Thee didn't tell me anything , only at last , when I got her up from the ground , she showed me the little stickle- back lying still and limp in her hand , and sobbed out through her tears ...
... question the child as to what had happened . Thee didn't tell me anything , only at last , when I got her up from the ground , she showed me the little stickle- back lying still and limp in her hand , and sobbed out through her tears ...
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Common terms and phrases
Academy army beautiful Bussex called character Church civilisation course crofters CXLIX.-NO death door Elizabeth Carter England English eyes face fact father favour feel Fitz followed French give Gladstone Gladys gold Government hand head heard heart Hermione Home Rule honour horse India interest Ireland Irish Irish Parliamentary party Kaffir king knew kraal labour lady land Leontes letter living London look Lord Lord Carnarvon major Marcantonia matter ment mind Monk Soham morning Morocco mother native nature ness never night officers once parish Parnell party passed person Pipette plague political present queen recruits round Scotland Scottowe seemed side soldier spirit stand stringed instruments Talleyrand tell Theodora thing thought tion told took turned Umtata whole wife woman words yeou young Zulu