Blackwood's Magazine, Volume 186William Blackwood, 1909 - England |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 9
... face an unpleasant fact . He imagines that a ready humour and pro- fessions of good fellowship can reconcile the secular antagon- isms of Irish parties . A flag- rant defiance of the criminal law is condoned on the ground that popular ...
... face an unpleasant fact . He imagines that a ready humour and pro- fessions of good fellowship can reconcile the secular antagon- isms of Irish parties . A flag- rant defiance of the criminal law is condoned on the ground that popular ...
Page 10
... face the responsibility . Knowing nothing of the native mind , they imagine it a reflex of the familiar bourgeois article at home . A stern policy towards a recalcitrant tribe is conceived as if it were the tyranny of a bureaucrat over ...
... face the responsibility . Knowing nothing of the native mind , they imagine it a reflex of the familiar bourgeois article at home . A stern policy towards a recalcitrant tribe is conceived as if it were the tyranny of a bureaucrat over ...
Page 16
... face to face with it is an evil , that it perpetually primitive nature and elemental tends to transgress those limits , passions , who see often the often the and that such transgressions bare ribs of our social struc- cover the larger ...
... face to face with it is an evil , that it perpetually primitive nature and elemental tends to transgress those limits , passions , who see often the often the and that such transgressions bare ribs of our social struc- cover the larger ...
Page 21
... face the heaviest odds without failing . It was well for Eng- lishmen in India fifteen years later that so many of their leaders had undergone in their youth the trials of 1841 and '42 , that the steel of their high spirit had been ...
... face the heaviest odds without failing . It was well for Eng- lishmen in India fifteen years later that so many of their leaders had undergone in their youth the trials of 1841 and '42 , that the steel of their high spirit had been ...
Page 41
... face of difficulties was full of re- source and self - reliance , so long as he knew that he had the support of his superiors , a support which was freely accorded to him . During a great part of each year I saw him frequently , and ...
... face of difficulties was full of re- source and self - reliance , so long as he knew that he had the support of his superiors , a support which was freely accorded to him . During a great part of each year I saw him frequently , and ...
Contents
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Common terms and phrases
able Allerton Ambrose arms Army asked ball better British Byblos called captain CLXXXVI.—NO Cockney command course door duty England English eyes fact French give Goble Government Hafiz Ullah Haider Haliburton hand Havildar head heard heart Henry Home Office honour horse House House of Lords Hughie Hughie's India Indian Army Joan Joey King knew lady land Leroy look Lord Lord Kitchener Lord Rosebery Marrable matter Maud ment military mind Miss Gaymer morning native ness never Neville Chamberlain night officers once Orinoco passed pirates play ponies present Punjab regiment replied rifle round Royle Scotland seemed sent ship side Sikh soldier stood Subedar tell Territorial Force thing thought tion Tiptoft to-day told took troops turned voice Wanlock Wenamon words young