The National Review, Volume 59W.H. Allen, 1912 - English literature |
From inside the book
Page 26
... American Anglophobes , depend for their bread and butter c embittering the relations between Ireland and England . TI speaker dropped one particularly pertinent remark : " If Irelan were in the South Pacific they could have a Colonial ...
... American Anglophobes , depend for their bread and butter c embittering the relations between Ireland and England . TI speaker dropped one particularly pertinent remark : " If Irelan were in the South Pacific they could have a Colonial ...
Page 55
... American readers . He deals mainly with principles . Bit his conclusions have an application to British present - day conditions , and he often illustrates his points from those conditions . The most striking fact is that , writing ...
... American readers . He deals mainly with principles . Bit his conclusions have an application to British present - day conditions , and he often illustrates his points from those conditions . The most striking fact is that , writing ...
Page 81
... American China Develop- Tent Company's work on the Hankow - Canton Railway , where be made money ; later , he became secretary to the Viceroy , I'en Ch'un - hsüan , and from that post , by the Viceroy's influence , TOL , LIX 6 rose ...
... American China Develop- Tent Company's work on the Hankow - Canton Railway , where be made money ; later , he became secretary to the Viceroy , I'en Ch'un - hsüan , and from that post , by the Viceroy's influence , TOL , LIX 6 rose ...
Page 84
... American - educated celestial youth being par- ticularly cocksure of his views on the rights of man in general and his own in particular . Then , too , the Republican party makes a forcible appeal to the sympathies of the missionary ...
... American - educated celestial youth being par- ticularly cocksure of his views on the rights of man in general and his own in particular . Then , too , the Republican party makes a forcible appeal to the sympathies of the missionary ...
Page 95
... American people . " Mr. Seward was very civil but prosy . . . . He took Mr. Rose and me to the President , who was also very civil and also told us cries " -that terrible American habit . The limitations of the aristocratic gauge is ...
... American people . " Mr. Seward was very civil but prosy . . . . He took Mr. Rose and me to the President , who was also very civil and also told us cries " -that terrible American habit . The limitations of the aristocratic gauge is ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Admiral Admiralty Army Asquith Australia Baghdad Railway believe Bergson Berlin Bonar Law Britain British Cabinet China Chinese Church Churchill Constitution danger defence doubt duty election Empire England English Europe Exchequer fact favour fleet force foreign France French German gipsies give Government House of Commons Imperial increase India interests Ireland Irish Parliament John Redmond Labour land Liberal Lloyd George loan Lord Haldane matter Mediterranean ment military millions Molly Maguires Morocco National Review naval Navy never Newlands Corner nomination Northern Territory Office opinion organised peace political politicians position present President Press Prime Minister proposals question Radical railway realise Redmond regard Republican Roosevelt Russia Salon scheme ships Sir Edward South speech strike Suffren Taft Territory things tion to-day trade Triple Entente Ulster Unionist Unionist Party United Kingdom vote Wales Welsh whole words