The Quarterly Review, Volumes 222-223William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1915 |
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Pagina 22
... vessels visiting Port Sudan- the principal port in the country - rose from 312,770 in 1907 to nearly 700,000 in 1914. Since the Government established regular mail steamers - which , in the face of many physical difficulties ( of which ...
... vessels visiting Port Sudan- the principal port in the country - rose from 312,770 in 1907 to nearly 700,000 in 1914. Since the Government established regular mail steamers - which , in the face of many physical difficulties ( of which ...
Pagina 29
... vessel hold- ing her course , alike in storm and calm , now with sails and now with oars , never outstripped by any other craft afloat , but coming back at last from the remotest seas to be piloted up the Po and the Mincio into the ...
... vessel hold- ing her course , alike in storm and calm , now with sails and now with oars , never outstripped by any other craft afloat , but coming back at last from the remotest seas to be piloted up the Po and the Mincio into the ...
Pagina 34
... vessel as a personal friend that had braved with him all the perils of the deep . From many other of his poems similar evidence might be given of his keen appreciation of the sea . Now the position of Sirmio - an islet , like a ship at ...
... vessel as a personal friend that had braved with him all the perils of the deep . From many other of his poems similar evidence might be given of his keen appreciation of the sea . Now the position of Sirmio - an islet , like a ship at ...
Pagina 67
... vessels , however great it may be , is inexorably limited to the range of their guns , and is further circum- scribed by the coal - supply . Naval guns can do little more than bombard coasts , and without an adequate supply of steam ...
... vessels , however great it may be , is inexorably limited to the range of their guns , and is further circum- scribed by the coal - supply . Naval guns can do little more than bombard coasts , and without an adequate supply of steam ...
Pagina 111
... vessel - destroyer or submarine . There is also another consideration . Armies fight for positions ; navies fight that their merchant ships may use the seas without molestation . If we bear in mind these distinctions , it is not ...
... vessel - destroyer or submarine . There is also another consideration . Armies fight for positions ; navies fight that their merchant ships may use the seas without molestation . If we bear in mind these distinctions , it is not ...
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