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Hitherto and service
Hitherto the railway had been run as a department of the government, and was subject to the normal civil service rules and requirements.

Hitherto and had
Hitherto the empire of the Habsburgs had never been able to dissociate itself from its Holy Roman traditions.
Hitherto Austria had been content either to keep out the Russians or share the booty with them.
" Hitherto Monk had continued to make solemn protestations of his affection and fidelity to the Commonwealth interest, against a King and House of Lords ; but the new militia being settled, and a Convention, calling themselves a Parliament and fit for his purpose, being met at Westminster, he sent to such lords as had sat with the Parliament till 1648, to return to the place where they used to sit, which they did, upon assurance from him, that no others should be permitted to sit with them ; which promise he also broke, and let in not only such as had deserted to Oxford, but the late created lords.
Hitherto the position of the monarchy had been precarious ; as in Aragon the nobles and the church had exercised a large measure of control over their nominal head, and though it would be pedantry to over-emphasize the importance of the royal title, its assumption by Afonso III does mark a definite stage in the evolution of a national monarchy and a centralized government.
Hitherto former Frankish kings had respected imperial convention and circulated gold coins with the image of the emperor.
Hitherto, Abkhazians, especially princes, had been using Greek ( up to c. 9th century ), Georgian ( 9 – 19th centuries ), and partially Turkish ( 18th century ) languages.
Hitherto, poetry had been used mostly to glorify or sanctify war.
Hitherto, the practice had been to put microphones in front of the performers and simply record what they performed.
Hitherto Molé's relations with Cardinal Richelieu had been fairly good, but his inclination to the doctrines of Port Royal increased the differences between them.
Hitherto Burne-Jones had worked almost entirely in water-colours.
Hitherto the region had just been described as the Harz.
Hitherto he had been apparently inactive in the Hutt conflict and befriended settlers and the local administration.
Hitherto Charles had aimed at supporting the weaker Slavonic power against the stronger ; but now that Russia seemed about to disappear from among the nations of Europe, Swedish statesmen naturally sought some compensation for the expenses of the war before Poland had had time to absorb everything.
Hitherto Sweden had kept aloof from continental complications ; but the arrest and execution of the Duc d ' Enghien in 1804 inspired Gustav IV with such a hatred of Napoleon that when a general coalition was formed against the French emperor he was one of the first to join it.
Hitherto Cleon had only been a vigorous opposition speaker, a trenchant critic and accuser of state officials, but he now came forward as the professed champion and leader of the democracy and, as a result, dominated Athenian politics.
Hitherto in the various conflicts with the Pākehā the Māori had always shown themselves to be consummately skilful warriors, so skilful that although heavily outnumbered they had already fought the British Army to a standstill on several occasions.
Hitherto scholars of ancient literature had shown a preference for the grandness and masculinity of Man ' yōshū poetry and an aversion to works like the Tale of Genji, which were regarded as unmanly and feminine.
Hitherto in the Royal Navy, such boats had been driven by petrol engines but this fuel is highly flammable, making them vulnerable to fire, and at a disadvantage compared with the German diesel-powered E-boats.

Hitherto and already
Hitherto, Arabic astronomers had adopted a primarily research approach to the field, translating works of others and learning already discovered knowledge.

Hitherto and written
An ancient Hebrew legend tells that the sea flooded the world and when it reached the shore of Acre it stopped short, as is written in the Book of Job ( 38: 11 ) “ Hitherto shalt thou come, but no further .” In the legend, the Hebrew words “ Ad po ” become “ Ad ko ,” and, hence, Akko.
Hitherto those poets such as Zamenhof who had written in Esperanto were limited by the still young language and apart from Antoni Grabowski, no poet had managed to make a mark on the language.

Hitherto and would
Hitherto this possibility had been offered only as a kit for retro-fitting: it was stated that the factory fitted servo-assistance, at a domestic market price slightly below £ 13, would be cheaper for customers.

Hitherto and later
( Hitherto unknown, it was Garibaldi's fame in this war which led to his later central role in the Unification of Italy ).

Hitherto and be
Politically conservative, à Beckett was strongly opposed to the social disruption caused by the Victorian Gold Rush and under the pseudonym ' Colonus ' espoused his views in an influential pamphlet somewhat cumbersomely entitled Does the Discovery of Gold in Victoria Viewed in Relation to its Moral and Social Effects as Hitherto Developed Deserve to be Considered a National Blessing or a National Curse?

Hitherto and Poems
* Manuscript Poems: Eight Hundred Lines of Hitherto Un-collected Verse from the Author's Notebooks, ed.
Fíanaigecht, being a Collection of Hitherto Unedited Irish Poems and Tales Relating to Finn and his Fiana, with an English Translation.

Hitherto and .
Hitherto, his father Sancho I and his grandfather Afonso I were mostly concerned with military issues either against the neighbouring Kingdom of Castile or against the Moorish lands in the south.
Hitherto ruled by a monarchical dynasty, Egypt became a republic on 18 June 1953, in the wake of the Egyptian Revolution of 1952.
Hitherto, the legions were regarded as shock troops employed only en masse and not broken up into detachments.
Hitherto, if any one wished to study it, he was obliged to take lessons from a foreigner, or to go to Germany.
Hitherto nothing seems to have been known among the Jacobite exiles of the efficiency of the Highlanders as a military force.
Hitherto little known, Khatami attracted global attention during his first election to the presidency when he captured almost 70 % of the vote.

service and Keyes
Keyes left Oxford and joined the army in April 1942, entering active service that same year.
Keyes was discharged from the service in October 1945, and entered the real estate business with his father.
Admiral of the Fleet Roger John Brownlow Keyes, 1st Baron Keyes, Bt GCB KCVO CMG DSO RN ( 4 October 1872 – 26 December 1945 ) was a noted British admiral, with an active service life that included 19th-century African anti-slavery patrols to the Allied landings in Leyte in World War II.
When World War II broke out, Keyes was very anxious to obtain active service.

service and had
He had worked in the newspaper business since he was nineteen years old, always for the Hearst service.
The Fourteenth Regiment of Ohio Volunteers lost one-third of its numbers within a few minutes, among them being several men whose time of service had expired but who had volunteered to advance with their regiment.
Colonel Benjamin Ford wrote to Morgan from Wilmington that he understood a Mrs. Sanderson from Maryland had obtained permission from Smallwood to visit Philadelphia, and would return on May 26th, escorted by several officers from Maryland `` belonging to the new levies in the British service ''.
Both abolition of war and new techniques of production, particularly robot factories, greatly increase the world's wealth, a situation described in the following passage, which has the true utopian ring: `` Everything was so cheap that the necessities of life were free, provided as a public service by the community, as roads, water, street lighting and drainage had once been.
But, lacking money from commercial sponsors, the stations have had difficulties meeting expenses or improving their service.
With his long service he had a long memory, an excellent thing in a political leader.
He finished the worship service as if there had been no brazen attempt to dishonor God and man.
When he had given the call a few moments thought, he went into the kitchen to ask Mrs. Yamata to prepare tea and sushi for the visitors, using the formal English china and the silver tea service which had been donated to the mission, then he went outside to inspect the grounds.
One had taken a flight into uncharted space, in the service of science, to return as a living hero.
Piloting a Curtiss Navy MF flying boat off Lake Winnipesaukee in 1925, he had inaugurated the original Rural Delivery air service in America.
Hub, nosing about, spotted reporters in the lobby, so Andy was hustled away quietly through the hotel's service entrance in a strange car which Hub had procured somewhere.
William Smythe, director of field service, told the commissioners that Multnomah, as of Aug. 22, had spent $58,918 out of its budgeted $66,000 in the category, leaving only $7,082 for the rest of the month.
The Lummus Cotton Gin Co. has had a sales and service office in Dallas since 1912.
The funeral service was in the house, the Methodist minister, how clean and glistening his eyeglasses and his neat body standing beside that coffin with that doll inside, a stranger speaking to strangers the old sacred words, and the rain drumming incessantly in accompaniment, seven days of relentless rain that turned the ground to mud so the burial had to be postponed.
Old Mr. Thom himself had stopped at the service station for a grease job, Wally confessed, and couldn't get one because there were cars on the pits waiting to be repaired.
Jubal would not have minded it if service had not gone to pieces.
He there entered the service of Henry II of France and had undertaken a campaign to regain his lands when he died at Pforzheim on 8 January 1557.
Anna then protested that the family was in fear for their lives, her sons were loyal subjects ( Alexios and Isaac were discovered absent without leave ), and had learned of a plot by enemies of the Komnenoi to have them both blinded and had, therefore, fled the capital so they may continue to be of loyal service to the emperor.
However, Peter had wished his son and heir to dedicate himself to the service of new Russia, and demanded from him unceasing labour in order to maintain Russia's new wealth and power.
He also had a mistress, Kathara, who was in the service of his second wife.
In some other respects the Athenians were not the old popular rulers they had been at first ; and if they had more than their fair share of service, it was correspondingly easy for them to reduce any that tried to leave the confederacy.

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