The Quarterly Review, Volumes 222-223William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1915 - English literature |
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Page 26
... continued to be traceable in his poetry up to the end . Again , in the case of Horace , we recognise the lasting impression made on his young imagination by the features of his native Apulia- its thirsty summers , its flooded Aufidus ...
... continued to be traceable in his poetry up to the end . Again , in the case of Horace , we recognise the lasting impression made on his young imagination by the features of his native Apulia- its thirsty summers , its flooded Aufidus ...
Page 79
... continued to remain a member of the Alliance for the same reasons as those for which she entered it , for her attention was more occupied with the ' Austrian Question ' as a possible disturber of the peace of Europe than with the ...
... continued to remain a member of the Alliance for the same reasons as those for which she entered it , for her attention was more occupied with the ' Austrian Question ' as a possible disturber of the peace of Europe than with the ...
Page 227
... continued assumption by Britain of liability for the Russo - Dutch loan.§ Holland had not been fairly treated . As Aberdeen pointed out , the alleged principle of non - interference , and of ' allowing Belgium to manage its own affairs ...
... continued assumption by Britain of liability for the Russo - Dutch loan.§ Holland had not been fairly treated . As Aberdeen pointed out , the alleged principle of non - interference , and of ' allowing Belgium to manage its own affairs ...
Page 233
... continued to move so long as Bismarck was in power . But they were lines too modest to satisfy William II . The idea that the German race would some day find a Promised Land in Asia Minor and Mesopotamia was itself far older than ...
... continued to move so long as Bismarck was in power . But they were lines too modest to satisfy William II . The idea that the German race would some day find a Promised Land in Asia Minor and Mesopotamia was itself far older than ...
Page 282
... continued to display considerable activity , the Allies ' guns were steadily establishing their superiority . In the Eastern theatre of war the Germans , after sustaining what seemed to be a decisive defeat between the Vistula and the ...
... continued to display considerable activity , the Allies ' guns were steadily establishing their superiority . In the Eastern theatre of war the Germans , after sustaining what seemed to be a decisive defeat between the Vistula and the ...
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