The Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay, Volumen1Longmans, Green, 1923 |
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Página 3
... reason to be proud , and still more certain assurance that he would never afford them cause for shame , that what he wrote was preserved with a care very seldom bestowed on childish compositions ; and the value set upon his letters by ...
... reason to be proud , and still more certain assurance that he would never afford them cause for shame , that what he wrote was preserved with a care very seldom bestowed on childish compositions ; and the value set upon his letters by ...
Página 4
... reason for liking the book is characteristic enough . Macaulay had recorded the belief prevalent in St. Kilda that , as soon as the factor landed on the island , all the inhabitants had an attack which from the account appears to have ...
... reason for liking the book is characteristic enough . Macaulay had recorded the belief prevalent in St. Kilda that , as soon as the factor landed on the island , all the inhabitants had an attack which from the account appears to have ...
Página 17
... reasons of the Abolitionists . The nigger driver and the negrophile are two odious things to I must make Lady Macbeth's reservation : Had he not resembled me . showed faint signs of irritation if anyone ventured in his 1800-18 . 17 LORD ...
... reasons of the Abolitionists . The nigger driver and the negrophile are two odious things to I must make Lady Macbeth's reservation : Had he not resembled me . showed faint signs of irritation if anyone ventured in his 1800-18 . 17 LORD ...
Página 42
... reason , not to speculate in Aspenden Park , but to interchange ideas with some person who can understand me . This is what I miss at Aspenden . There are several here who possess both taste and reading ; who can criticise Lord Byron ...
... reason , not to speculate in Aspenden Park , but to interchange ideas with some person who can understand me . This is what I miss at Aspenden . There are several here who possess both taste and reading ; who can criticise Lord Byron ...
Página 51
... reason instead of with a job . Confidence and respect , and ( what in the House of Commons is their unvarying accompaniment ) power , were gradually , and to a great extent involuntarily , accorded to this group of members . They were ...
... reason instead of with a job . Confidence and respect , and ( what in the House of Commons is their unvarying accompaniment ) power , were gradually , and to a great extent involuntarily , accorded to this group of members . They were ...
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Términos y frases comunes
admiration Æschylus affectionately amusing Aspenden beautiful Bill breakfast Brougham Calcutta called Cambridge character Court dear delighted dined dinner Duke Edinburgh Review England English father favour feel friends give Government Greek Hannah hear heard Holland House honour hope hour House of Commons hundred India knew labour Lady letter literary lived look Lord Althorp Lord Durham Lord Grey Lord Holland Lord Macaulay Lord Plunket Macaulay's Macvey Napier Margaret matter ment mind Ministers morning Napier never night opinion Parliament party passed person pleasure poet political Reform remember Rothley Temple sister society speech spirit Street T. B. M. London T. B. MACAULAY talk taste tell thing thought tion told Tories Trevelyan walk week Whig whole Wilberforce wish words write yesterday young Zachary Macaulay