The Quarterly Review, Volume 233, Issue 463William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1920 |
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Page 256
... taken such trouble to raise . He watched with as much attention as anxiety the incessant labour that was being accomplished in Italy , the agitation going on in Switzerland , the progress of ideas in Germany , and especially the ...
... taken such trouble to raise . He watched with as much attention as anxiety the incessant labour that was being accomplished in Italy , the agitation going on in Switzerland , the progress of ideas in Germany , and especially the ...
Page 258
... taken , his plan of campaign well thought out . He had laid down a programme whose realisation he prosecuted in spite of all obstacles ; and the unpublished dispatch which follows is , if I am not mistaken , one of the first ...
... taken , his plan of campaign well thought out . He had laid down a programme whose realisation he prosecuted in spite of all obstacles ; and the unpublished dispatch which follows is , if I am not mistaken , one of the first ...
Page 264
... taken by the old Marshal de la Tour , at the instigation of Metternich , must , indeed , have been all the more surprising to M. Guizot and the French Government from the fact that there had been nothing in the reports that had been ...
... taken by the old Marshal de la Tour , at the instigation of Metternich , must , indeed , have been all the more surprising to M. Guizot and the French Government from the fact that there had been nothing in the reports that had been ...
Page 268
... taken the wrong path , and felt that he was greatly in danger of finding the ground on which he had advanced sink from under him . It was necessary to hush up the matter , in order to prevent it from rankling and assuming such ...
... taken the wrong path , and felt that he was greatly in danger of finding the ground on which he had advanced sink from under him . It was necessary to hush up the matter , in order to prevent it from rankling and assuming such ...
Page 269
... taken by events in Switzerland at that period , to the emotion that they had caused in Turin , to the attitude adopted by the cabinet of the Tuileries in regard to Spain and in the question of the Spanish Marriages , even to the ...
... taken by events in Switzerland at that period , to the emotion that they had caused in Turin , to the attitude adopted by the cabinet of the Tuileries in regard to Spain and in the question of the Spanish Marriages , even to the ...
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