The Irish Quarterly Review, Volume 9, Part 1W. B. Kelly, 1859 - Ireland |
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Page 7
... possessed all eyes and all hearts for the rest of the evening . It was no more the writer , the painter , the musician , that welcome receptions awaited ; it was the deputy , the confidential friend of the constitution , who could ...
... possessed all eyes and all hearts for the rest of the evening . It was no more the writer , the painter , the musician , that welcome receptions awaited ; it was the deputy , the confidential friend of the constitution , who could ...
Page 8
... possessed the power of entertaining as well as receiving . listen , and to appear to listen when she listened not . She had said one or two good things in her life , and she never repeated them ex- cept at long intervals . To these ...
... possessed the power of entertaining as well as receiving . listen , and to appear to listen when she listened not . She had said one or two good things in her life , and she never repeated them ex- cept at long intervals . To these ...
Page 24
... possessed great influence , and powerful means of going to work among the spirits of the time . It was this section of society that prepared itself to struggle and resist . The nobility being divided , disbanded , irresolute ...
... possessed great influence , and powerful means of going to work among the spirits of the time . It was this section of society that prepared itself to struggle and resist . The nobility being divided , disbanded , irresolute ...
Page 52
... possessed for the great mass of the people . To argue , however , that the Exhibition of 1851 , in an agricultural point of view , was superior , beyond com- parison , to any previous one , is a work of supererogation . It is true live ...
... possessed for the great mass of the people . To argue , however , that the Exhibition of 1851 , in an agricultural point of view , was superior , beyond com- parison , to any previous one , is a work of supererogation . It is true live ...
Page 63
... possessing all their faculties . It is this consideration that has led us to agree with Dr. Kitto in his opinion as to the comparative evils of blindness and the loss of the other senses . We still admit that physically the deaf mute is ...
... possessing all their faculties . It is this consideration that has led us to agree with Dr. Kitto in his opinion as to the comparative evils of blindness and the loss of the other senses . We still admit that physically the deaf mute is ...
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