Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 142W. Blackwood & Sons, 1887 |
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Page 70
... fact of its familiarity renders it unsuitable for the pur- pose , and it is , in fact , more easy for a learner to gain a knowledge of language through a language not his own . Our own language is too near to us to be an object of study ...
... fact of its familiarity renders it unsuitable for the pur- pose , and it is , in fact , more easy for a learner to gain a knowledge of language through a language not his own . Our own language is too near to us to be an object of study ...
Page 161
... fact that Bellendean with warm curiosity Captain Bellendean , who was in- when the whisper ran through dignant beyond measure at the the house that Joyce had come— girl's caprice and folly , had fallen and had gone away again . Gone ...
... fact that Bellendean with warm curiosity Captain Bellendean , who was in- when the whisper ran through dignant beyond measure at the the house that Joyce had come— girl's caprice and folly , had fallen and had gone away again . Gone ...
Page 601
... fact home to our people . With our great enemy the case is different . The whole resources of the State are at the disposal of the Tzar , before whom silently the facts which serve as motives for action can be laid . Year after year a ...
... fact home to our people . With our great enemy the case is different . The whole resources of the State are at the disposal of the Tzar , before whom silently the facts which serve as motives for action can be laid . Year after year a ...
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able Andrew Halliday army Austria Axel Munthe beautiful believe Bellendean better Captain Carlyle Church Colonel Hayward Congo course cried dear defence doubt England English eyes fact father feeling force France French friends frontier German girl give Gladstone Gladstone's Gladstonian Goethe Government Greta hand heart Home Rule Ireland Irish island Joyce Joyce's kind knew lady land Léopoldville Liberal Liberal Unionists look Lord Hartington Lord Palmerston Lord Randolph matter means ment military mind nation natural ness never officers once Parliament Parnell party passed perhaps political position prefect present question railway river round Russia scarcely Scotland seemed Serk side sion Sir Charles Dilke Sir George Trevelyan speak stand stood sure tell territorial army thing thought tion turned Unionists Vistula voice War Office woman words young