The Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay, Volumen4White, Stokes, & Allen, 1876 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 27
Página 11
... spirit , * which at once de- " If you say that you cannot congratulate us , I say ' Wait till you are asked . ' It would be highly improper to ask the House to express on the present occasion any opinion on the foreign relations of the ...
... spirit , * which at once de- " If you say that you cannot congratulate us , I say ' Wait till you are asked . ' It would be highly improper to ask the House to express on the present occasion any opinion on the foreign relations of the ...
Página 25
... spirit makes men ! " Some scribbler in the Morning Post has just now a spite to Trevelyan , and writes several absurd papers against him every week . He will never hear of them probably , and will certainly not care for them . They can ...
... spirit makes men ! " Some scribbler in the Morning Post has just now a spite to Trevelyan , and writes several absurd papers against him every week . He will never hear of them probably , and will certainly not care for them . They can ...
Página 51
... spirit . But I enjoyed the pleasure of giving a royal pension to Dr. Davies , and of collating Dr. Apthorpe to an archiepiscopal living . " " " *** Macaulay's view of Milner is pretty strongly expressed on the margin of his copy of the ...
... spirit . But I enjoyed the pleasure of giving a royal pension to Dr. Davies , and of collating Dr. Apthorpe to an archiepiscopal living . " " " *** Macaulay's view of Milner is pretty strongly expressed on the margin of his copy of the ...
Página 67
... spirit . Goethe is the single instance of an unbeliever who has attempted to put himself into the person of one of these pious autobiographers . He has tried to imitate them , just as he tried to imitate the Greek dramatists in his ...
... spirit . Goethe is the single instance of an unbeliever who has attempted to put himself into the person of one of these pious autobiographers . He has tried to imitate them , just as he tried to imitate the Greek dramatists in his ...
Página 73
... spirit , but with more hesitation than on any occasion on which I have heard him . Disraeli's speech was clever . In defiance of all rule he gave Lord John Russell's health . Lord John answered good humouredly and well . I was glad of ...
... spirit , but with more hesitation than on any occasion on which I have heard him . Disraeli's speech was clever . In defiance of all rule he gave Lord John Russell's health . Lord John answered good humouredly and well . I was glad of ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
admire Æschylus amused Athenæum Club aulay aulay's Author of-vide bill breakfast called Charles Charles Dickens Church copies dear December diary dined dinner Edinburgh Edition effect Ellis England English Euripides February feel fellow friends George give glad Greek Hannah heart History Holly Lodge honour hope House of Commons hundred India January journal Lady language letter literary live looked Lord Aberdeen Lord Carlisle Lord Clive Lord Derby Lord Hotham Lord John Lord Lansdowne Lord Macaulay Macaulay writes Macaulay's Mark 60 Pfennig matter ment mind Miss months never novel once opinion Palmerston Parliament passage Pfennig pleasant pleasure Poems poet political poor Portrait pour le Mérite pretty Protagoras says sewed Mark speech spirit Story talk Tauchnitz thing thought tion to-day told Trevelyan Tunbridge uncle vide volume walked whole wish wrote