2042 examples of churchill in sentences

"In my study," he states, "he found many books open to him; among others, a set of our poets from Chaucer to Churchill, which I am almost tempted to say he had more than once perused from beginning to end."

The success of Byron's satire was due to the fact of its being the only good thing of its kind since Churchill,for in the Baviad and Maeviad only butterflies were broken upon the wheeland to its being the first promise of a now power.

During that month he wrote the Monody on Sheridan, The Dream, Churchill's Grave, the Sonnet to Lake Leman, Could I remount the River of my Years, part of Manfred, Prometheus, the Stanzas to Augusta, beginning, My sister!

The losses were placed by Mr. Winston Spencer Churchill at nearly 1,000 guns, between 4,000 and 5,000 machine guns, and a quantity of ammunition "requiring from one to three weeks to manufacture."

An American woman, Lady Randolph Churchill, also took an active part in the work of the committee, which soon succeeded in raising a large sum for the relief of the most urgent distress in Poland.

Peculiarly the weapon of the classical school, it had fallen into unskillful hands: Churchill, though keen and bold, lacked the grace of Pope and the power of Johnson.

Sholmlug Churchill ...

Churchill's Poems (ed. 1766), ii.41.

The sturdiest assailant was Charles Churchill.

" CHURCHILL, The Ghost.]

Candour certainly did not require that they should acknowledge Mr. Churchill, whose name was now inserted in the title-page, as the author, or if author of any, at least not of a considerable part of the poem.

"This is another Brutum Fulinen launched at the Critical Review by one Churchill, who it seems is a clergyman, and it must be owned has a knack at versification; a bard, who upon the strength of having written a few good lines in a thing called The Rosciad, swaggers about as if he were game-keeper of Parnassus.

It was thenwhen she knew what had happenedthat Meleese came to mewhom she had made the happiest man in the world because it was she who brought my Mariane over from Churchill on a visit especially that I might see her and fall in love with her, M'seurwhich I did.

Mr. Winston Churchill on the "Responsibility" of DiplomacyWhat does he mean?An

Churchill on "illusions"The danger of war is not the illusion but its benefitsWe are all Pacifists now since we all desire PeaceWill more armaments alone secure it?The experience of mankindWar "the failure of human wisdom"Therefore more wisdom is the remedyBut the Militarists only want more armsThe German Lord RobertsThe military campaign against political RationalismHow to make war certain.

Mr. Winston Churchill on the "Responsibility" of DiplomacyWhat does he mean?An

Why does Mr. Churchill say it has?

You realise Mr. Churchill's method: Having made the necessary admission of fact, you immediately prevent any unpleasant (or unpopular) practical conclusion concerning our duty in the matter by talking of the "complacency" of those who would fix any real and definite part of the responsibility upon you.

" It is a like confusion of thought which prompts Mr. Churchill to refer to Pacifists as people who deem the danger of war an illusion.

As a matter of simple fact, both the Navy League, by its demand for two ships to one, and Mr. Churchill, by his demand for certain victory, deny in this matter Germany's right to defend herself; and such denial is bound, on the part of a people animated by like motives to ourselves, to provoke a challenge.

When Mr. Churchill goes further and says that a nation should be so strong as to make victory over its rivals certain, he knows that if Germany were to adopt his own doctrine its inevitable outcome would be war.

Mr. Churchill by implication warmly supports it.

" This, of course, is taken straight from Mr. Churchill, who, at Dundee, told us that "the way to make war impossible is to be so strong as to make victory certain.

I am quite sure that the big armament people in Germany are very grateful for the advice which Mr. Churchill and Lord Roberts thus give to the nations of the world, and we may expect to see German armaments so increased as to accord with the new principle.

Now the whole problem sifts finally down to this one question: Is the assumption made by Lord Roberts and implied by Mr. Churchill concerning the relation of military force to trade and national life well founded?

2042 examples of  churchill  in sentences