He was appointed commander at Detroit in 1796 and partially redeemed himself by rejecting entreaties to lead a rebellion in the Natchez, Mississippi, area.
This section of the novel is particularly redolent with autobiographical references, with Benjamin Smith, Smith's husband, represented by Elphinstone, in a portrait that partially redeems him after his portrayal as Mr. Stafford in Emmeline.
If one of them clung miraculously to life, and if she could get help for himpolice and paramedics-she would partially redeem herself.
The film's energy begins to flag after less than an hour, and as its pulse slackens it turns into a quirky allegory, punctuated with brilliant visionary flashes that partially redeem a philosophic ham-handedness.
A week later however, Williams collected the first interception of his NFL career off Brandon Weeden of the Cleveland Browns and returned it 63 yards for a touchdown, partially redeeming his lackluster performance the week before.
After World War II Valentin Yanin partially redeemed Trubetskoy: according to Yanin, the legendary shipment of samples to Warsaw was a coverup of Cancrin's invention, rather than Trubetskoy's own hoax.
(In 1951 Childs partially redeemed himself in the eyes of the offended with an article "The Town I Like - Clinton, Iowa," which appeared in the May-June issue of Lincoln-Mercury Times).
This not only made his toon face partially reappear but also takes an effect on his internal toon parts, partially redeeming him.
The film at least partially redeems the hope surrounding it.
Ye Fei partially redeemed for the loss by winning the Dongshan Island Campaign in July 1953.