Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 142William Blackwood, 1887 - England |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 82
Page 85
... tion in this country will be forced by public opinion upon the notice of the Government . Still less can it be doubted that the result of such inquiry will be to compel a change , were it only to take the shape of an abject return to ...
... tion in this country will be forced by public opinion upon the notice of the Government . Still less can it be doubted that the result of such inquiry will be to compel a change , were it only to take the shape of an abject return to ...
Page 89
... tion to these facts , it may be well to add that " the chief officers " of the Ordnance to whom the Report alludes , while separately they man- aged the special concerns intrusted to them , did so under instructions from the whole body ...
... tion to these facts , it may be well to add that " the chief officers " of the Ordnance to whom the Report alludes , while separately they man- aged the special concerns intrusted to them , did so under instructions from the whole body ...
Page 97
... tion and a third minute before reaching the hands of the first clerk , and through the first clerk to the permanent Under - Secretary . If the matter under discussion be important , both of these gentlemen express their opinions upon it ...
... tion and a third minute before reaching the hands of the first clerk , and through the first clerk to the permanent Under - Secretary . If the matter under discussion be important , both of these gentlemen express their opinions upon it ...
Page 106
... tion , the only effectual comfort of the mourner , which is to be found in religion . He had been brought up in the austere seriousness of a family of Evangelical principles ; and contrary to the wont of so many , who have been repelled ...
... tion , the only effectual comfort of the mourner , which is to be found in religion . He had been brought up in the austere seriousness of a family of Evangelical principles ; and contrary to the wont of so many , who have been repelled ...
Page 113
... tion of women during the reign of Queen Victoria have this great fact in their favour , that any such distracted and distracting figure as that of Lady Lytton , tearing her hair and cursing her husband in the sight of all the world ...
... tion of women during the reign of Queen Victoria have this great fact in their favour , that any such distracted and distracting figure as that of Lady Lytton , tearing her hair and cursing her husband in the sight of all the world ...
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