| William Gawtress - 1819 - 154 pągines
...as if we had been present on the occasion — we owe it to Short Hand. In short, all those brilliant and spirit-stirring effusions which the circumstances...for the facilities afforded to their preservation by Short Hand. Were the operations of those who are professionally^ engaged in exercising this art to... | |
| William Harding (stenographer.) - 1824 - 58 pągines
...as if we had been present on the occasion — we owe it to Short Hand. In short, all those brilliant and spirit-stirring effusions which the circumstances...soul of the speaker, would have been entirely lost to prosterity, and comparatively little known to ourselves, had it not been for the facilities afforded... | |
| E. Harmon - 1846 - 122 pągines
...if we had been present on the occasions — we owe it to short hand. In short, all those brilliant and spirit-stirring effusions which the circumstances...for the facilities afforded to their preservation by short hand. " Were the operations of those who are professionally engaged in exercising this art, to... | |
| sir Isaac Pitman - 1849 - 108 pągines
...and whieh the press transmits to us with sueh astonishing eelerity, warm from the lips and instinet with the soul of the speaker, would have been entirely lost to posterity, and eomparatively little known to ourselves, had it not been for the faeilities afforded to their preservation... | |
| sir Isaac Pitman - 1852 - 82 pągines
...and whieh the press transmits to us with sueh astonishing eelerity, warm from the lips and instinet with the soul of the speaker, would have been entirely lost to posterity, and eomparatively little known to ourselves, had it not been for the faeilities afforded to their preservation... | |
| Edward James Jones - 1862 - 124 pągines
...short, all those brilliant and spirit-stirring cli-usions which the circumstances of the present limes combine to draw forth, and which the press transmits...astonishing celerity, warm from the lips and instinct with tho soul of the speaker, would have been entirely lost to posterity, and comparatively little known... | |
| Frederick Boileau Elliot - 1864 - 40 pągines
...public through the press, which, thanks to shorthand and nimble fingers, could rescue from oblivion, warm from the lips, and instinct with the soul of the speaker, all the brilliant and spirit-stirring effusions which the circumstances of the present times combined... | |
| Edward James Jones - 1871 - 114 pągines
...ax if we had been present on the occasion — we owe it to Shorthand. In short, all those brilliant and spirit-stirring effusions which the circumstances...ourselves, had it not been for the facilities afforded for their preservation by Shorthand. Were the operations of those who are professionally engaged in... | |
| Edward James Jones - 1880 - 106 pągines
...short, all those brilliant and spirit-stirring effusions which the circumstances of the present time combine to draw forth, and which the press transmits...ourselves, had it not been for the facilities afforded for their preservation by Shorthand. Were the operations of those who are professionally engaged in... | |
| Miles Armitage - 1884 - 58 pągines
...minuteness, as if we had been present on the occasion, we owe it to shorthand. In short, all those brilliant and spirit-stirring effusions which the circumstances...draw forth, and which the press transmits to us with astonishing celerity, warm from the lips and instinct with the soul of the speaker, would have been... | |
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