The Quarterly Review, Volumen192William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1900 |
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Página 10
... question was doubtless one which touched his very existence . Perhaps he felt instinctively that he had gone too far to trust for his safety either to the effects of civilising agencies or to a policy of conciliation . From the first he ...
... question was doubtless one which touched his very existence . Perhaps he felt instinctively that he had gone too far to trust for his safety either to the effects of civilising agencies or to a policy of conciliation . From the first he ...
Página 15
... question . Indeed , we sometimes meet in the Com- pendium ' with comments upon the inhumanity of the Boers expressed with a degree of warmth for which we fear that the author of the ' History of South Africa ' must have many times had ...
... question . Indeed , we sometimes meet in the Com- pendium ' with comments upon the inhumanity of the Boers expressed with a degree of warmth for which we fear that the author of the ' History of South Africa ' must have many times had ...
Página 16
... question once for all by the stern device of self - expatriation . The causes of the Great Trek of the year 1837 have been the subject of incessant controversy . If it was due - as is often asserted to the insecurity of life and ...
... question once for all by the stern device of self - expatriation . The causes of the Great Trek of the year 1837 have been the subject of incessant controversy . If it was due - as is often asserted to the insecurity of life and ...
Página 23
... question which has not been further elucidated by his later researches , there was no room for mercy : - The Government felt that it was necessary to show these people , so long accustomed to anarchy , that they must be obedient to the ...
... question which has not been further elucidated by his later researches , there was no room for mercy : - The Government felt that it was necessary to show these people , so long accustomed to anarchy , that they must be obedient to the ...
Página 24
... question . It was for this that the Great Trek was made , and in this mind the children of those Voor - trekkers have continued down to our own times . ART . II . - LORD BYRON . 1. The 24 Dr. Theal on South African History .
... question . It was for this that the Great Trek was made , and in this mind the children of those Voor - trekkers have continued down to our own times . ART . II . - LORD BYRON . 1. The 24 Dr. Theal on South African History .
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