The New-England Magazine, Band 7Joseph Tinker Buckingham, Edwin Buckingham, Samuel Gridley Howe, John Osborne Sargent, Park Benjamin J. T. and E. Buckingham, 1834 |
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Seite 41
... honor , and been , in almost every instance , so generously rewarded . That they were , is certainly true beyond dispute . Where the executive management of a nation is through instruments created by unmixed despotism , and guided to a ...
... honor , and been , in almost every instance , so generously rewarded . That they were , is certainly true beyond dispute . Where the executive management of a nation is through instruments created by unmixed despotism , and guided to a ...
Seite 42
... honor . But they possessed the reverence of the people , and , with that sacred ægis , even the monarchs had caution enough - provided they did not love the poets , which is improbable - to leave them secure and unmolested . Despots ...
... honor . But they possessed the reverence of the people , and , with that sacred ægis , even the monarchs had caution enough - provided they did not love the poets , which is improbable - to leave them secure and unmolested . Despots ...
Seite 46
... Honor ; held the order of St. Anne of Russia ; had a box of state at the theatre of Weimar ; enjoyed all that wealth , honor , and the company of the great spirits of his time could bestow , and expired with the words of Hamlet upon his ...
... Honor ; held the order of St. Anne of Russia ; had a box of state at the theatre of Weimar ; enjoyed all that wealth , honor , and the company of the great spirits of his time could bestow , and expired with the words of Hamlet upon his ...
Seite 56
... honor but rather a disgrace . At any rate the officer , what- ever may be his qualifications , never escapes ridicule . If his own deportment be unassailable , that of his soldiers is always open to attack . Accordingly , the Adjutant ...
... honor but rather a disgrace . At any rate the officer , what- ever may be his qualifications , never escapes ridicule . If his own deportment be unassailable , that of his soldiers is always open to attack . Accordingly , the Adjutant ...
Seite 67
... honor , that I had not meant to affront her ; that I was led into error solely by repeating her own word . It was equally in vain that I appealed to some of the passengers who un- derstood French , who testified that the mistake was ...
... honor , that I had not meant to affront her ; that I was led into error solely by repeating her own word . It was equally in vain that I appealed to some of the passengers who un- derstood French , who testified that the mistake was ...
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