| Arthur Cayley Headlam - 1897 - 546 str.
...me is that, where there is known to be a common object, the pursuit of truth, there should also be a studious desire to interpret the adversary in the...and to make the most of whatever tends to narrow it. These I hold to be part of the laws of knightly tournament' (pp. 43-4). This does not prevent him from... | |
| 1886 - 892 str.
...FAIR TRIAL. 291 there is known to be a common object, the pursuit of truth, there should also be a studious desire to interpret the adversary in the...and to make the most of whatever tends to narrow it. These I hold to be part of the laws of knightly tournament. I do not, therefore, fully understand why... | |
| 1886 - 988 str.
...me is, that where there is known to be a common object, the pursuit of truth, there should also be a studious desire to interpret the adversary in the...and to make the most of whatever tends to narrow it. These I hold to be part of the laws of knightly tournament. I do not, therefore, fully understand why... | |
| 1886 - 922 str.
...me is, that where there is known to be a common object, the pursuit of truth, there should also be a studious desire to interpret the adversary in the...and to make the most of whatever tends to narrow it. These I hold to be part of the laws of knightly tournament. I do not, therefore, fully understand why... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - 1886 - 898 str.
...History." t Lucr. ii. 8. there is known to be a common object, the pursuit of truth, there should also be a studious desire to interpret the adversary in the...and to make the most of whatever tends to narrow it. These I hold to be part of the laws of knightly tournament. I do not, therefore, fully understand why... | |
| 1886 - 406 str.
...me is, that where there is known to be a common object, the pursuit of truth, there should also be a studious desire to interpret the adversary in the...breach ; and to make the most of whatever tends to nafrow it. These I hold to be part of the laws of knightly tournament. I do not, therefore, fully understand... | |
| William Ewart Gladstone - 1897 - 530 str.
...me is, that where there is known to be a common object, the pursuit of truth, there should also be a studious desire to interpret the adversary in the best sense his words will * ' Bridgewater Treatise," vol. i. pp. 19-28. Chap. i. : "Consistency of Geological Discoveries with... | |
| William Ewart Gladstone - 1897 - 454 str.
...me is, that where there is known to be a common object, the pursuit of truth, there should also be a studious desire to interpret the adversary in the best sense his words will * 'Bridgewater Treatise,' vol. i. pp. 19-28. Chap. i. : "Consistency of Geological Discoveries with... | |
| David Irvine, Rudolf Louis, Karl Heckel - 1899 - 366 str.
...psychology of the characters further than the poem."* We shall need to take Mr. Gladstone's advice here, and "interpret the adversary in the best sense his words will fairly bear " : for wfiat if the music is just part and parcel of the poem ? Only, you understand, we call it drama,... | |
| John Morley - 1903 - 672 str.
...me is that where there is known to be a common object, the pursuit of truth, there should also be a studious desire to interpret the adversary in the...and to make the most of whatever tends to narrow it. These I hold to be part of the laws of knightly tournament.' And to these laws he sedulously conformed.... | |
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