Blackwood's Magazine, Volume 205; Volume 208William Blackwood, 1920 - England |
From inside the book
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Page 116
... arms and am- munition with which to defend themselves against the Mullah . This policy had been carried into fall effect by Mareh 1910. Disorder , which beggars description , ensued . The friend- ly tribes abandoned themselves to an ...
... arms and am- munition with which to defend themselves against the Mullah . This policy had been carried into fall effect by Mareh 1910. Disorder , which beggars description , ensued . The friend- ly tribes abandoned themselves to an ...
Page 126
... arms if necessary . " The people , hear- ing this proclamation read , refused to treat it seriously . On all hands it was dismissed as mere bluff . " The General will not fire , " said the rebels . " You need not be afraid . " It is ...
... arms if necessary . " The people , hear- ing this proclamation read , refused to treat it seriously . On all hands it was dismissed as mere bluff . " The General will not fire , " said the rebels . " You need not be afraid . " It is ...
Page 134
... arms . Their courage and persistence broke the power of Germany , and the one hope of Great Britain as of France is that the two countries will still be knit together in the bonds of friendship . The civilisation of Europe will , in ...
... arms . Their courage and persistence broke the power of Germany , and the one hope of Great Britain as of France is that the two countries will still be knit together in the bonds of friendship . The civilisation of Europe will , in ...
Page 140
... Shylook had little to do either with the hallucinations of Crook- brain or with the views of the no - doubt learned members of the Newark Board of Educa- Ireland are in arms " 140 [ Aug. Shylock , Macbeth , and Ian MacTavish .
... Shylook had little to do either with the hallucinations of Crook- brain or with the views of the no - doubt learned members of the Newark Board of Educa- Ireland are in arms " 140 [ Aug. Shylock , Macbeth , and Ian MacTavish .
Page 141
the Newark Board of Educa- Ireland are in arms " ? tion ; for he was not con- ceived as a typical Jew , but as the most notable character in a great play , a perfect part of a magnificent mosaic of passion , wit , revenge , friend- ship ...
the Newark Board of Educa- Ireland are in arms " ? tion ; for he was not con- ceived as a typical Jew , but as the most notable character in a great play , a perfect part of a magnificent mosaic of passion , wit , revenge , friend- ship ...
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Common terms and phrases
Afghans Aizawa Allies arms army arrived asked Baluch Bandar Abbas Barkat Berber British called camels camp Captain Chahbar coast Daria Daria Begi dark Dervishes dhows Disraeli door Empress enemy England English eyes face Fags feet fighting fish force French German Government Grey guns Halit hand head hills horse Hugo India Ireland Irish Jashk Jean Bart Kambar Karachi knew Lady land Lewis gun live looked Lord Lord Kitchener Macbeth MacTavish Mahsud Makran Masqat ment miles morning murder never night nullah officer once Oxley party passed Pecklebury Persian picquet political pump replied rifles road rook round Russian seemed ship side Sinn Fein Sultan Swift tell thing thought tion told took troops turned Ulidia village voice words Yamato yards Yung Seng