Letters from Geneva and France: Written During a Residence of Between Two and Three Years, Volumen2Wells and Lilly, 1819 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 52
Página 13
... means of subsis- tence , and the business that had brought him to France , and still kept him there , he was dismissed with the wholesome advice of being more circum- spect for the future . It is impossible to approach LETTER LX . 13.
... means of subsis- tence , and the business that had brought him to France , and still kept him there , he was dismissed with the wholesome advice of being more circum- spect for the future . It is impossible to approach LETTER LX . 13.
Página 22
... means to be burlesque , he is ridiculous to excess , but his comical Romance contains some interesting and many laughable scenes , and led the way to that humour , those well described incidents of village manners , those scenes of ...
... means to be burlesque , he is ridiculous to excess , but his comical Romance contains some interesting and many laughable scenes , and led the way to that humour , those well described incidents of village manners , those scenes of ...
Página 23
... means de- cided what was to be the cry , whether for or against the Convention or the Commune , till one of the gens d'armes , who had followed the committee with- out any particular orders , levelled a pistol at ་ Robespierre as he ...
... means de- cided what was to be the cry , whether for or against the Convention or the Commune , till one of the gens d'armes , who had followed the committee with- out any particular orders , levelled a pistol at ་ Robespierre as he ...
Página 29
... means of their splendid connexions , bore down every thing before him . The manners of the age were extremely unfavourable to every degree of good order in government , and of decorum in private life , and some idea may be formed of the ...
... means of their splendid connexions , bore down every thing before him . The manners of the age were extremely unfavourable to every degree of good order in government , and of decorum in private life , and some idea may be formed of the ...
Página 33
... mean- est as well as the greatest individual , he is safe from every thing but the government , but their in- feriour agents are sometimes capricious as well as their great master , and know how to convert an idle and accidental ...
... mean- est as well as the greatest individual , he is safe from every thing but the government , but their in- feriour agents are sometimes capricious as well as their great master , and know how to convert an idle and accidental ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Letters from Geneva and France: Written During a Residence of ..., Volumen1 Francis Kinloch Sin vista previa disponible - 2018 |
Letters from Geneva and France: Written During a Residence of ..., Volumen1 Francis Kinloch Sin vista previa disponible - 2018 |
Términos y frases comunes
Abbe Sicard admiration affect America amusement ancient Angerville appearance army assignats attention battle of Austerlitz called castle character Chouans church circumstances conduct convent court deaf and dumb death distinguished dress Duke Duke of Guise emperour England English Europe expression extremely fatal fate favourite former formerly fortune Foundling Hospital France French frequently garden give handsome Henry IV honour human idea inferiour inhabitants king lady letters lived Louis XIV Louis XVI Madame mankind manner manufactories ment mind monarch Monte Bolca Nantes nation nature never object occasion once Paimboeuf palace Paris passed perhaps person Pont Neuf pounds sterling present Prince principal prison proper publick religion remains rendered republick respect revolution Robespierre royal Rue St says scenes seems seen singular sort speak success superiour suppose theatre thing tion told Vendean Vendèe Voltaire young
Pasajes populares
Página 151 - It is now sixteen or seventeen years since I saw the queen of France, then the dauphiness, at Versailles; and surely never lighted on this orb, which she hardly seemed to touch, a more delightful vision.
Página 214 - ... and of sorrow very strongly marked upon his countenance. I do not think that in the whole course of my life I ever saw a countenance which held out less encouragement to any one who might be disposed to ask a favour from, or throw himself upon the mercy of another. I now felt more forcibly than I had yet done in France, the blessing of being born in a free country, and as we looked down upon the...
Página 232 - Lacretelle than one would suppose the present time admitted of; the Abbe de Lisle has distinguished himself by a translation of Milton, and by another of Virgil ; and the author of the Studies of Nature, and of Paul and Virginia is still alive.
Página 198 - April, 1796, which terminated with these words : " Nations of Italy ! the French army is come to break your chains ; the French are the friends of the people in every country; your religion, your property, your customs shall be respected.
Página 199 - The gallant remr nant of his army, who might with justice have upbraided him for the waste which had been made of their strength, and the distress they had been so unprofitably exposed to, seemed rather disposed to solicit his forgiveness for not having done more. His last exploit in Egypt was the attack of the Turkish post at Aboukir, and here Fortune, whom he has almost converted into a goddess, seems indeed to have befriended him. Miot, one of his warmest admirers, asserts, that if the Turks,...
Página 193 - To them the will, the wish, the want, the liberty, the toil, the blood of individuals, is as nothing. Individuality is left out of their scheme of government. The state is all in all.
Página 145 - Sevre where the manufactory is carried on, which produces the beautiful procelain, commonly called Seve china. It is equal to all that has been said of it, and after declining, as every other great national establishment did, during the revolution, now flourishes again under the peculiar patronage of the emperour.
Página 97 - ... for myself, and in its most adverse moments I never lost my hopes. These words, which have infinitely more grace in the original than in the translation I have been able to give of them, might, with the strictest regard to truth, be engraven upon the tomb-stone of general Gadsden, of South-Carolina; of whom it may also be said, that having been one of the first to raise the standard of revolt against the parent government, he was the first to advise an act of oblivion in favour of those who had...
Página 208 - ... other children. Had he lived some centuries ago, his flatterers might easily have persuaded him, that the name he had borne before his exaltation was by no means that which belonged to him. They would have traced his lineage to a much higher source, and have made him the son of Hercules or of Jupiter Ammon.
Página 52 - ... Beauharnois, is among the number, though he perished by the guillotine, and is placed next to the door at which the Empress enters, when she attends as usual, to the opening of the sessions. Such a figure must, I should think, excite some strange ideas in her mind, when she passes so close to it; he was a man of fashion and quality, and lived a great deal at court, which accounts for the facility with which his widow has been able to accommodate herself to the etiquette of her new situation....