The Living Age, Volume 294Living Age Company, 1917 |
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Pagina 5
... feeling that he owes it to himself and his order to make his exit with a sense of style . I remember that when I was a boy the story of Sir Philip Sidney at the battle of Zutphen bit deep into my imagination . I derived it from a large ...
... feeling that he owes it to himself and his order to make his exit with a sense of style . I remember that when I was a boy the story of Sir Philip Sidney at the battle of Zutphen bit deep into my imagination . I derived it from a large ...
Pagina 8
... feeling , so that the noblest souls in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries were content to give up everything , including their lives , for an elderly flirt like Queen Elizabeth , or an obstinate and con- fused intriguer like ...
... feeling , so that the noblest souls in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries were content to give up everything , including their lives , for an elderly flirt like Queen Elizabeth , or an obstinate and con- fused intriguer like ...
Pagina 12
... feeling of inquisitiveness , met together between the lines in No Man's Land . There was some amicable conversation where they could make themselves under- stood to each other , which happened when a German was found who could speak a ...
... feeling of inquisitiveness , met together between the lines in No Man's Land . There was some amicable conversation where they could make themselves under- stood to each other , which happened when a German was found who could speak a ...
Pagina 13
... feeling is extraordinarily devoid of the vindictiveness that springs from a deep sense of personal injury , and evokes , in turn , a desire for revenge , which , were it shown , would , however lamentable , be not unnatural in the ...
... feeling is extraordinarily devoid of the vindictiveness that springs from a deep sense of personal injury , and evokes , in turn , a desire for revenge , which , were it shown , would , however lamentable , be not unnatural in the ...
Pagina 17
... feeling of hostility subsides , once the sense of danger is removed by the enemy being put out of action , and each side sees in its captives not devils or barbarians , but fellow men . Es- pecially among the wounded , British and ...
... feeling of hostility subsides , once the sense of danger is removed by the enemy being put out of action , and each side sees in its captives not devils or barbarians , but fellow men . Es- pecially among the wounded , British and ...
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Alan Seeger Allies Alsace Alsace-Lorraine American army asked beautiful British called child Christian Christina Church Cornhill Magazine course Datchery death Dickens Don Pablo Empire enemy England English eyes face fact feel fighting France French friends G. W. M. Reynolds garden German girl give Government guns hand heart Henry James honor hour human interest Irish J. C. Squire knew land Lincoln LIVING AGE look Lord means ment Merridew military mind Morisco mother Mudford Nance nations natural never officers once party passed peace perhaps Petrograd political present question Review Russia seemed ship side soldiers soul spirit story things thought tion told Tommy Atkins took turn United Villajoyosa W. M. LETTS Warwick Brown whole William De Morgan woman words young