The Quarterly Review, 233. köideWilliam Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1920 |
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... Armenians : their Past and Future . By W. E. D. Allen XV . Notes on a Visit to Germany . Published Quarterly by the LEONARD SCOTT PUBLICATION COMPANY BARR FERREE . PROP . 249 WEST THIRTEENTH STREET , NEW YORK . Single Copies , $ 1.50 ...
... Armenians : their Past and Future . By W. E. D. Allen XV . Notes on a Visit to Germany . Published Quarterly by the LEONARD SCOTT PUBLICATION COMPANY BARR FERREE . PROP . 249 WEST THIRTEENTH STREET , NEW YORK . Single Copies , $ 1.50 ...
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... . 13. - EINSTEIN ON TIME AND SPACE - ART . 14. THE ARMENIANS : THEIR PAST AND FUTURE ART . 15 - NOTES OF A RECENT VISIT TO GERMANY · - 205 - 226 · 237 - 245 THE QUARTERLY REVIEW . No. 462. - JANUARY , 1920 vi CONTENTS.
... . 13. - EINSTEIN ON TIME AND SPACE - ART . 14. THE ARMENIANS : THEIR PAST AND FUTURE ART . 15 - NOTES OF A RECENT VISIT TO GERMANY · - 205 - 226 · 237 - 245 THE QUARTERLY REVIEW . No. 462. - JANUARY , 1920 vi CONTENTS.
Page 236
... light of truth is dazzling . But , as the years pass , our eyes , accustomed to the light , will seek to penetrate what is yet beyond . A. S. EDDINGTON . Art . 14. - THE ARMENIANS : THEIR PAST AND 236 EINSTEIN ON TIME AND SPACE.
... light of truth is dazzling . But , as the years pass , our eyes , accustomed to the light , will seek to penetrate what is yet beyond . A. S. EDDINGTON . Art . 14. - THE ARMENIANS : THEIR PAST AND 236 EINSTEIN ON TIME AND SPACE.
Page 237
... ARMENIANS : THEIR PAST AND FUTURE . THAT it takes two Greeks to cheat a Maltese , two Maltese to cheat a Jew , and two Jews to cheat an Armenian , ' is a ratio which has probably never been mathematically proved , but as a ...
... ARMENIANS : THEIR PAST AND FUTURE . THAT it takes two Greeks to cheat a Maltese , two Maltese to cheat a Jew , and two Jews to cheat an Armenian , ' is a ratio which has probably never been mathematically proved , but as a ...
Page 238
... Armenian and the Erivan Armenian are the real Armenians , the type of the nation which has preserved its individuality through three thousand years of vicissitudes . The history of the Armenians is one of incessant tragedy . Combining ...
... Armenian and the Erivan Armenian are the real Armenians , the type of the nation which has preserved its individuality through three thousand years of vicissitudes . The history of the Armenians is one of incessant tragedy . Combining ...
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Popular passages
Page 236 - I seem to have been only as a boy playing on the sea-shore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all
Page 316 - shall concurre with his sorrow, to his farther vexation. No one wicked person, by any diversion or cunning, shall avoid this sorrow, for it is in the midst, and in the end of all his forced contentments; Even in laughing, the heart is sorrowful, and the end of that mirth is heaviness!
Page 433 - The policy of reducing Germany to servitude for a generation, of degrading the lives of millions of human beings, and of depriving a whole nation of happiness, should be abhorrent and detestable, even if it were possible, even if it enriched ourselves, even if it did not sow the decay of the whole civilised life of Europe.
Page 226 - The best in this kind are but shadows; and the worst are no worse, if imagination amend them.
Page 425 - binding character; for one of the conditions of it was that Germany should agree to Armistice terms, which were to be such as would leave her helpless. Germany having rendered herself helpless in reliance on the Contract, the honour of the Allies was peculiarly involved in fulfilling their part, and, if there were ambiguities,
Page 316 - the Prison, and the place of Execution, does any man sleep? And we sleep all the way; from the womb to the grave we are never throughly awake ; but passe on with such dreames, and imaginations as these, I may live as well, as another, and why should I dye, rather then another? but awake, and tell me,
Page 217 - This Church, as part of the Universal Church wherein the Lord Jesus Christ has appointed a government in the hands of Church Office-Bearers, receives from Him, its Divine King and Head, and from Him alone, the right and power, subject to no civil authority, to legislate and to adjudicate finally in all matters of doctrine, worship, government, and
Page 427 - The war had so shaken this system as to endanger the life of Europe altogether. A great part of the Continent was sick and dying; its population was greatly in excess of the numbers for which a livelihood was available ; its organisation was destroyed, its transport system ruptured,
Page 218 - The Church has the right to interpret these Articles, and, subject to the safeguards for deliberate action and legislation provided by the Church itself, to modify or add to them, but always consistently with the first Article hereof, adherence to which, as interpreted by the Church, is essential to its continuity and corporate life.
Page 217 - This Church has the inherent right, free from interference by civil authority, but under the safeguards for deliberate action and legislation provided by the Church itself, to frame or adopt its subordinate standards, to declare the sense in which it understands its Confession of Faith, to modify the forms of expression therein,