After Hood's arrival, it does not appear that there was avoidable delay in going to sea; but there does seem to have been misjudgment in the direction given to the fleet.
The first misjudgment deranged the German plans, the second those of the Allies, while the third upset the minds of the world.
Time was needed to remedy these miscalculations, but time was provided by our command of the sea, about which there had been no misjudgment and no lack of pre-vision.
But, even if we grant, to the cause of misjudgmenthere indicated, a greater practical efficiency than history will fairly sanction, still, it is only one among others more mischievous.
Disastrous as such misjudgment was, it counts at least as a proof that the moral corruption alleged to have been operated in their characters, is a mere fiction.
And she behaved like an angel through the whole industrious night--so much so that Lilian was nearly ready to admit to an uncharitable premature misjudgment of the girl.
He said no word of apology for hismisjudgment of her, but his tone apologized.
Was it possible that in the cruel, almost insulting things she had said to him she had been influenced by some utter misjudgment of his motives?
The extent of Wellington's misjudgment we can easily perceive and understand.
Napoleon himself said later that his marshal was no longer the same man since the disasters of two years before; but even if Ney had been as alert as ever, misjudgment quite as much as lack of will must have entered into what he did.
There were faults and delays, but he managed, mainly through the malinformation and misjudgment of Wellington, to deal with the Prussians unsupported by Wellington's western wing.
Which by its omniscience becomes the all that is present in its knowledge, and which we take by our misjudgment for real entities in this world (when our ignorance mistakes the manifest world for its latent cause).
All these appearances appearing in various forms, are but the diverse manifestations of the self-same soul; it is therefore a fallacy to suppose, this is one thing and that another, by our misjudgment of them.