At last a long article appeared, on the 7th of October, in the
bulletin of the Royal Geographical Society, which treated the question from every point of view, and demonstrated the utter folly of the enterprise.
Geoffrey's face darkened as he read the third
bulletin. He called once more for the hated writing materials.
Pierre took that letter, and Rostopchin also gave him the Emperor's appeal to Moscow, which had just been printed, the last army orders, and his own most recent
bulletin. Glancing through the army orders, Pierre found in one of them, in the lists of killed, wounded, and rewarded, the name of Nicholas Rostov, awarded a St.
On the morning when the final results of all the examina- tions were to be posted on the
bulletin board at Queen's, Anne and Jane walked down the street together.
There is also a universal government
bulletin, in which are listed and precisely described everything which the commonwealth has for sale.
The king, shut up in his own apartment, dispatched his nurse every hour to Mazarin's chamber, with orders to bring him back the exact
bulletin of the cardinal's state.
They were: Wickson's "California Fruits," Wickson's "California Vegetables," Brooks' "Fertilizers," Watson's "Farm Poultry," King's "Irrigation and Drainage," Kropotkin's "Fields, Factories and Workshops," and Farmer's
Bulletin No.
When, at Schonbrunn, on May 13, 1809, Napoleon wrote the
bulletin addressed to the Grand Army, then the masters of Vienna, in which he said that like Medea, the Austrian princes had slain their children with their own hands; Genestas, who had been recently made a captain, did not wish to compromise his newly conferred dignity by asking who Medea was; he relied upon Napoleon's character, and felt quite sure that the Emperor was incapable of making any announcement not in proper form to the Grand Army and the House of Austria.
There was a new
bulletin, but what it said he did not gather except that it concerned the Barbarossa.
Brooke sent a
bulletin every day, and as the head of the family, Meg insisted on reading the dispatches, which grew more cheerful as the week passed.
The matrons dropped off one by one, with the exception of six or eight particular friends, who had determined to stop all night; the lights in the houses gradually disappeared; the last
bulletin was issued that Mrs Kenwigs was as well as could be expected; and the whole family were left to their repose.
Captain Wragge's
bulletin was duly announced -- Miss Bygrave was so ill as to be confined to her room.