Blackwood's Magazine, Volume 96W. Blackwood., 1864 |
From inside the book
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Page 35
... eyes of the seamen . And it must not be for- gotten that there are great disad- vantages in the present system of schoolboy officers , by which the discipline of the fleet suffers no slight injury , as we have before pointed out . Turn ...
... eyes of the seamen . And it must not be for- gotten that there are great disad- vantages in the present system of schoolboy officers , by which the discipline of the fleet suffers no slight injury , as we have before pointed out . Turn ...
Page 42
... eyes upon it for the exigencies of his Government . It would be too much to expect of any man , much less of Prince Couza , who is not much troubled with the devotional sentiment , to nourish in his bosom the ecclesiastical vampire ...
... eyes upon it for the exigencies of his Government . It would be too much to expect of any man , much less of Prince Couza , who is not much troubled with the devotional sentiment , to nourish in his bosom the ecclesiastical vampire ...
Page 46
... eyes of those with whom he is stay- ing . The wonder to every foreigner is , that the national policy should be the result of the national char- acter . As individuals , Englishmen have the credit of being the most scrupulously truthful ...
... eyes of those with whom he is stay- ing . The wonder to every foreigner is , that the national policy should be the result of the national char- acter . As individuals , Englishmen have the credit of being the most scrupulously truthful ...
Page 54
... eyes of Europe . The peculiar relations in which the sexes stand towards each other ren- der chivalry on the part of the men an impossibility . The sentiment is totally unknown among them , and there is , consequently , no basis for ...
... eyes of Europe . The peculiar relations in which the sexes stand towards each other ren- der chivalry on the part of the men an impossibility . The sentiment is totally unknown among them , and there is , consequently , no basis for ...
Page 56
... eyes and coursed down his cheeks . That same book - how it rankled , like a barbed arrow , in his side ! - that same book said that men are always wrong in their readings of woman - that they cannot under- stand the finer , nicer , more ...
... eyes and coursed down his cheeks . That same book - how it rankled , like a barbed arrow , in his side ! - that same book said that men are always wrong in their readings of woman - that they cannot under- stand the finer , nicer , more ...
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Common terms and phrases
able Æschylus Alice amount Aristotle army Bank better boys Butler Caffarelli called Carlingford character Christian Church College coup d'état course Couza cried dear doubt England English Eton Europe eyes fact favour feel follow give gold Government hand head heart honour human knew Lady Lady Eastlake language less living look Lord Lord Palmerston Lucy M'Caskey Maitland matter Max Müller McClellan means ment mind Naples nation nature never officers once passed perhaps Perpetual Curate poor position present Prince question Rector's wife Rugby seems Skeff Skelmersdale sort speak spirit St Alban's Hall suppose sure tain tell thing thought tion told Tony Tony Butler trade truth ture Victor Hugo Wallachia Wentworth Whately whole words young