The Quarterly Review, Tom 198William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1903 |
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Strona 585
... Lord Wolseley not entirely free from blame . ' The general impression to be derived from the whole circum- stances must be that the special function of the Commander- in - Chief , under the Order in Council of 1895 , viz . " the pre ...
... Lord Wolseley not entirely free from blame . ' The general impression to be derived from the whole circum- stances must be that the special function of the Commander- in - Chief , under the Order in Council of 1895 , viz . " the pre ...
Strona 589
... Lord Wolseley raised ' the pressing question for the Government to consider at this moment -to what extent shall we prepare for the contingency of war with the Transvaal ? ' and expressed the opinion that for that event ' we should ...
... Lord Wolseley raised ' the pressing question for the Government to consider at this moment -to what extent shall we prepare for the contingency of war with the Transvaal ? ' and expressed the opinion that for that event ' we should ...
Strona 590
... Lord Wolseley wrote a minute , intended for submission to the Cabinet , ending with the statement , ' In my opinion we have arrived at a moment when it would be unsafe and unwise to delay further action . ' To this Lord Lansdowne ...
... Lord Wolseley wrote a minute , intended for submission to the Cabinet , ending with the statement , ' In my opinion we have arrived at a moment when it would be unsafe and unwise to delay further action . ' To this Lord Lansdowne ...
Strona 591
... Lord Wolseley on July 7 were not ordered out until September 8 ; and the mobilisation of an army corps and cavalry division , and the communication troops asked for by him on June 8 , were not ordered until October 7 . These are the ...
... Lord Wolseley on July 7 were not ordered out until September 8 ; and the mobilisation of an army corps and cavalry division , and the communication troops asked for by him on June 8 , were not ordered until October 7 . These are the ...
Strona 592
... Lord Lansdowne's letters to Lord Wolseley of August 20 and August 27 , that the situation had improved , and that any demonstration of force might precipitate the crisis . This is an intelligible position , and therefore deserves a fair ...
... Lord Lansdowne's letters to Lord Wolseley of August 20 and August 27 , that the situation had improved , and that any demonstration of force might precipitate the crisis . This is an intelligible position , and therefore deserves a fair ...
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Strona 336 - Begin to cast a beam on the outward shape, The unpolluted temple of the mind, And turns it by degrees to the soul's essence, Till all be made immortal : but when lust By unchaste looks, loose gestures, and foul talk ; But most by lewd and lavish act of sin, Lets in defilement to the inward parts, The soul grows clotted by contagion, Imbodies, and imbrutes, till she quite lose The divine property of her first being.
Strona 435 - Immer strebe zum Ganzen, und kannst du selber kein Ganzes Werden, als dienendes Glied schließ an ein Ganzes dich an.
Strona 217 - And more, my son ! for more than once when I Sat all alone, revolving in myself The word that is the symbol of myself, The mortal limit of the Self was loosed, And past into the Nameless, as a cloud Melts into Heaven. I touch' d my limbs, the limbs Were strange not mine — and yet no shade of doubt, But utter clearness, and thro...
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Strona 349 - ... or by the nature of things. His birth, and the history of his life ; the profundity of his doctrine, which grapples the mightiest difficulties, and which is of those difficulties, the most admirable solution ; his Gospel, his apparition, his empire, his march across the ages and the realms...
Strona 555 - one section of the nation accused him of sophistry, of unwisdom, of a want of patriotism, of a lust for power;" while "the other section not only repelled these charges, but admired in him a conscientiousness and a moral enthusiasm such as no political leader has shown for centuries
Strona 369 - Our dear dove then, as Kate calls her, has folded her wonderful wings." "Yes — folded them." It rather racked him, but he tried to receive it as she intended, and she evidently took his formal assent for self-control. "Unless it's more true," she accordingly added, "that she has spread them the wider.
Strona 561 - You draw your line at the point where the abstract denial of God Is severed from the abstract admission of the Deity. My proposition Is that the line thus drawn is worthless, and that much on your side of the line is as objectionable as the atheism on the other.
Strona 227 - ... law. Out of the long Stone Age our race is awakening into consciousness of itself. We stand in the dawn of history. Behind us lies a vast and unrecorded waste — the mighty struggle humanam condere gentem. Since the times of that ignorance we have not yet gone far; a few thousand years, a few hundred thinkers, have barely started the human mind upon the great aeons of its onward way.
Strona 562 - ... to the plangent lines that have come down across the night of time to us from great Rome. But all these impressions of sublime feeling and strong reasoning were soon effaced by honest bigotry, by narrow and selfish calculation, by flat cowardice. The relieving bill was cast out by a majority of three. The catholics in the main voted against it, and many nonconformists, hereditary champions...