Blackwood's Magazine, Bind 212William Blackwood, 1922 |
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Side 50
... England's kings and queens and greatest men , they learn and realise that the history of England is not a precarious procession of separate epochs , but a gradu- ally growing whole , a service to which all are called in greater or less ...
... England's kings and queens and greatest men , they learn and realise that the history of England is not a precarious procession of separate epochs , but a gradu- ally growing whole , a service to which all are called in greater or less ...
Side 96
... England will be begged to send her best men to reorganise our Indian uni- versities . In The Medical College is no longer popular , as it no longer leads to any official career . British times nearly all gradu- ates of the Medical ...
... England will be begged to send her best men to reorganise our Indian uni- versities . In The Medical College is no longer popular , as it no longer leads to any official career . British times nearly all gradu- ates of the Medical ...
Side 98
... England threw up the sponge , and left for us a hell paved with her good intentions . In this hell we now are , and are blindly groping back to the gate from which to start afresh . example and restore the for- tunes of his family . 98 ...
... England threw up the sponge , and left for us a hell paved with her good intentions . In this hell we now are , and are blindly groping back to the gate from which to start afresh . example and restore the for- tunes of his family . 98 ...
Side 99
... England , where the Italian family name of " Arveo " was transformed into Harvey . In France it passed through the successive meta- morphoses of Arveou , Arvieu , Arvieux , and finally d'Arvieux on the family being ennobled , which ...
... England , where the Italian family name of " Arveo " was transformed into Harvey . In France it passed through the successive meta- morphoses of Arveou , Arvieu , Arvieux , and finally d'Arvieux on the family being ennobled , which ...
Side 100
... England ; but what may be termed legitimate risks to navigation were as nothing to the danger from the Barbary pirates , who swarmed in the Mediterranean and plundered the ships of every nation in- discriminately , to say nothing of the ...
... England ; but what may be termed legitimate risks to navigation were as nothing to the danger from the Barbary pirates , who swarmed in the Mediterranean and plundered the ships of every nation in- discriminately , to say nothing of the ...
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Abadeh Armenian arms Armstrong asked beautiful Belfast Bellowes BLACKWOOD'S MAGAZINE boat British Buddha called Captain carried Chealey Constantinople Consul Coorg Cornwall course Court Dail Eireann dark door Dragoman Dublin Dublin Castle Emmaline England English eyes face force France Francesca French friends Greek gunmen hand head heard Hilarion Indian Ireland Irish Jean knew lady land leave Letty live Lloyd George looked Lord Loyalists Major McNeil ment Michael Collins miles military Miss Corneroy Miss Patience Morawhanna morning murder Neil ness never night once passed police Polly port Priggles rakshasas realised Rintoul river road Ronald round Rufus Russian sahib Salonica seemed ship side Sinn Fein Skipper smile Smyrna South stood tell thing thought tion told took town Turkish Turks turned Ulster Ulster Loyalists village voice words
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Side 395 - They go up by the mountains; They go down by the valleys Unto the place which thou hast founded for them. Thou hast set a bound that they may not pass over; That they turn not again to cover the earth.
Side 215 - The benign principles of the Alliance of the 26th of September, 1815," it ran, "may be considered as constituting the European system in matter of political conscience. It would, however, be derogatory to this solemn act of the sovereigns to mix its discussion with the ordinary diplomatic obligations which bind State to State, and which are to be looked for alone in the treaties which have been concluded in the accustomed form.
Side 190 - ... guile seduced, no force could violate ; And, when she took unto herself a Mate, She must espouse the everlasting Sea. And what if she had seen those glories fade, Those titles vanish, and that strength decay; Yet shall some tribute of regret be paid When her long life hath reached its final day: Men are we, and must grieve when even the Shade Of that which once was great is passed away.
Side 137 - Ther saugh I first the derke imagining Of felonye, and al the compassing ; The cruel ire, reed as any glede ; The pykepurs, and eek the pale drede ; 1140 The smyler with the knyf under the cloke ; The shepne brenning with the blake smoke ; The treson of the mordring in the bedde ; The open werre, with woundes al bi-bledde ; Contek, with blody knyf and sharp manace ; Al ful of chirking was that sory place.
Side 211 - Commons. It seemed almost as though Lord Londonderry's accession to an English peerage would involve a national crisis. Mr. Pitt's secretary wrote to Castlereagh in grave insistent terms. ' I am almost persuaded,' said he, ' that you will be obliged to postpone your father's peerage. No man was ever so flatteringly pressed to decline honours. The real fact is that they hope you will make the same figure and take the same lead which you have done in Ireland, and they sadly want some character on whom...
Side 422 - York Saint Mary's School Mount Saint Gabriel PEEKSKILL-ON-THE-HUDSON, NY Boarding School for Girls Under the charge of the Sisters of St. Mary. New fireproof building beautifully situated. For catalogues address The Sister Superior.
Side 629 - Now you know my rank. I am twenty-four years old. Now you know my age. Sixteen months ago I left Great Britain a completely insular being, knowing hardly a word of French. I have been in Holland and in Germany, but not yet in France. You will therefore excuse my handling of the language. I am travelling with a genuine desire to improve myself. I have come here in the hope of seeing you. I have heard, Sir, that...
Side 632 - to my country, and he fetched me some letter of recommending him; but I was of the belief he might be an imposter, and I supposed, in my minte, he was an espy; for I look away from him, and in a moment I look to him again, and I behold his tablets. Oh ! he was to the work of writing down all I say! Indeed I was angry.
Side 264 - Ireland ; but the general conclusion that we draw from the evidence before us is that the main cause of the rebellion appears to be that lawlessness was allowed to grow up unchecked, and that Ireland for several years past has been administered on the principle that it was safer and more expedient to leave law in abeyance if collision with any faction of the Irish people could thereby be avoided.
Side 207 - I consider the rebels as now in your power, and I feel assured that your treatment of them will be such as shall make them sensible of their crimes, as well as of the authority of Government. It would be unwise, and contrary, I know, to your own feelings, to drive the wretched people, who are mere instruments in the hands of the more wicked, to despair. The leaders are just objects of punishment...