The Quarterly review, Band 87Murray, 1850 |
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Seite 23
... Lamartine styles him . That party claimed in the sequel the honour of having mainly stimulated the insurrec- tions of June and August , 1792 - of which the first utterly de- graded the crown , and the second , after sacking the ...
... Lamartine styles him . That party claimed in the sequel the honour of having mainly stimulated the insurrec- tions of June and August , 1792 - of which the first utterly de- graded the crown , and the second , after sacking the ...
Seite 43
... Lamartine had , from mere haste , allowed himself to follow the hints of obscure traducers , Arago communicated to him Madame O'Connor's remarks and replies , which he received ' avec cette bienveillance fascinatrice ( the italics are ...
... Lamartine had , from mere haste , allowed himself to follow the hints of obscure traducers , Arago communicated to him Madame O'Connor's remarks and replies , which he received ' avec cette bienveillance fascinatrice ( the italics are ...
Seite 44
... Lamartine's inexactitudes ' have had one good consequence : they led him to hunt out some surviving acquaintance of Sarret's , and one of these possessed a copy of Sarret's own little Traité d'Arith- métique , in the preface to which ...
... Lamartine's inexactitudes ' have had one good consequence : they led him to hunt out some surviving acquaintance of Sarret's , and one of these possessed a copy of Sarret's own little Traité d'Arith- métique , in the preface to which ...
Seite 76
... Lamartine's radical speeches about liberty , equality , and fraternity , composed of linseed oil , lampblack , sweet oil , and a secret ingredient . These preliminaries having been disposed of , the letters are carried to two double ...
... Lamartine's radical speeches about liberty , equality , and fraternity , composed of linseed oil , lampblack , sweet oil , and a secret ingredient . These preliminaries having been disposed of , the letters are carried to two double ...
Seite 119
... Lamartine added his voice to that of the old con- spirators in proclaiming the Republic , he must have known - if a paroxysm of spite and vanity had not turned his head - that these were the doctrines to which he allied himself , and ...
... Lamartine added his voice to that of the old con- spirators in proclaiming the Republic , he must have known - if a paroxysm of spite and vanity had not turned his head - that these were the doctrines to which he allied himself , and ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
agricultural already ancient appears Arago Assembly Ateliers auriferous Austria called Cato Celt character Church Columella Condorcet Court crop despatched doubt Emile Thomas empire English evidently existence eyes fact farm favour France friends Gaul give gold Government Greek hand honour Hungary Iliad Imperial King labour Lamartine land language less letters London Lord Castlereagh Lord Mulgrave Louis Blanc LXXXVII Madame Magyars manure ment Minister Mountains National Guard nature never observed opinion Palladius Paris parishes party passage persons Phipps Pitt Pliny plough political portion Post-Office practice present Prince Prince Metternich Prince Windischgrätz principal probably produce readers received remarkable respect revolution rocks Roman says seems Sierra Nevada soon sort Spain Spaniards Spanish thought Ticknor tion Turgot Ural Mountains Varro Vienna Wales Ward Ward's Welsh whole words writing
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 373 - TRAVEL in the younger sort is a part of education ; in the elder a part of experience. He that travelleth into a country before he hath some entrance into the language, goeth to school, and not to travel.
Seite 411 - Spain, Portugal, or any of his other provinces produce; it is his Indian gold that endangereth and disturbeth all the nations of Europe; it purchaseth intelligence, creepeth into counsels, and setteth bound loyalty at liberty in the greatest monarchies of Europe.
Seite 329 - Newton teaches nothing that would make a good logician or metaphysician, and Gassendi and Descartes do not agree so well with revealed truth as Aristotle does.
Seite 434 - The Tale of the Great Persian War, from the Histories of Herodotus. By GEORGE W. Cox, MA late Scholar of Trin. Coll. Oxon. Fcp. 7s. 6d. Greek History from Themistocles to Alexander, in a Series of Lives from Plutarch. Revised and arranged by AH CLOUGH. Fcp. with 44 Woodcuts, 6s. Critical History of the Language and Literature of Ancient Greece.
Seite 85 - ... whom they had been addressed. The Dead-Letter Office in London is evidently one of high trust and honour; and, in accordance with the principles by which it should be governed, it is a rule in this department NEVER to open a letter if it can possibly be returned to the writer without doing so. The seals of chartered companies and of noblemen are usually sufficient to effect this object ; and if the public, especially men of business, would inscribe upon their seals their addresses, instead of...
Seite 121 - ... alarmed Government the demand of a Ministry of Progress ! Organization of Labour ! This only confirmed Louis Blanc's colleagues in their apprehensions that, if they yielded this point, the new department would absorb all the confidence and power of the populace — the only power in the new State. Equally afraid to resist or to comply, they offered a compromise, and, with an insidious deference to his special studies and supposed attainments in political economy, they proposed to place Louis...
Seite 40 - Alors ils ne se réveillent qu'entourés des consolations qui en émoussent la pointe, et l'on jouit de son repentir comme de ses vertus. Sans doute les plaisirs d'une âme régénérée sont moins purs, sont moins doux que ceux de l'innocence ; mais c'est alors le seul bonheur que nous puissions encore trouver dans notre conscience, et presque le seul auquel la faiblesse de notre nature et surtout les vices de nos institutions nous permettent d'atteindre. Hélas!
Seite 92 - ... observed, that if the present cost of the moneyorder office were to be deducted from the gross amount of poundages lately received for money-orders issued throughout the United Kingdom, there would remain a small profit or revenue. The enormous business transacted in this branch of the PostOffice may be faintly exemplified by the fact, that every morning's post usually brings to the chief office in London (in which there are employed 178 clerks) no less than 12,000 advices, amounting to nearly...
Seite 110 - That an humble address be presented to Her Majesty, representing the great desire which exists in all parts of the United Kingdom for an extension of that rest on the Lord's Day which is afforded in the London Post Office to the post offices of the provincial towns, and praying that Her Majesty will be graciously pleased to direct that the collection and delivery of letters shall in future entirely cease on Sunday in all parts of the kingdom. "And also, that Her Majesty will cause an inquiry to...
Seite 242 - It happened, unfortunately for him, that another Ward, of about the same age and personal appearance, had incurred the suspicion of the republican party at a moment when suspicion lost all its doubts, and death followed close upon the heels of certainty. To use his own words, " I was arrested for having the same name, and the same coloured coat and waistcoat, as another Ward, guilty of treason ; was ordered without out trial to Paris, to be guillotined ; and only escaped by their catching the real...