The Quarterly Review, Volume 212William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1910 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 26
Page 240
... Bentinck's Life , by Mr Richard W. Goulding . ) 3. MSS . in possession of the Duke of Portland at Welbeck Abbey . 4. Unpublished Letters from Paris of March 1815 , from Sir Charles Bagot to Mr Hammond , in the possession of the ...
... Bentinck's Life , by Mr Richard W. Goulding . ) 3. MSS . in possession of the Duke of Portland at Welbeck Abbey . 4. Unpublished Letters from Paris of March 1815 , from Sir Charles Bagot to Mr Hammond , in the possession of the ...
Page 242
... Bentinck . The selection made from his despatches by those who were engaged in replying to them or in explaining them away , affords a partial and a misleading view . Com- mandant Weil has recently ransacked all public , and some ...
... Bentinck . The selection made from his despatches by those who were engaged in replying to them or in explaining them away , affords a partial and a misleading view . Com- mandant Weil has recently ransacked all public , and some ...
Page 243
... Bentinck ' as it then appeared to stand . The case against Bentinck is met by Lord Aber- deen's despatch , which justifies him in his instructions to Mr ( afterwards Sir James ) Graham , and in his own action . Lord Castlereagh has ...
... Bentinck ' as it then appeared to stand . The case against Bentinck is met by Lord Aber- deen's despatch , which justifies him in his instructions to Mr ( afterwards Sir James ) Graham , and in his own action . Lord Castlereagh has ...
Page 244
... Bentinck's men was Fagan , of whom we have been told that he exagger- ated the errors of his chief , and was crushed like an insect by the Foreign Office . But the truth is that our consul at Palermo was also our official agent at Rome ...
... Bentinck's men was Fagan , of whom we have been told that he exagger- ated the errors of his chief , and was crushed like an insect by the Foreign Office . But the truth is that our consul at Palermo was also our official agent at Rome ...
Page 245
... Bentinck through Fagan , and against Castlereagh through Bentinck , the police case was at its strongest . Fagan accepted censure from all sides , and has thus misled historians . When Ŕ Court , on taking Bentinck's place as Minister at ...
... Bentinck through Fagan , and against Castlereagh through Bentinck , the police case was at its strongest . Fagan accepted censure from all sides , and has thus misled historians . When Ŕ Court , on taking Bentinck's place as Minister at ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
admirable Akra ancient appear archives army Augusta Austria Bentinck Bill British Budget called Cantons Castlereagh century character Christian City of David civilisation clubs connexion constitutional course doubt Duke Elba electors Empire En-Rogel England English Europe European existence fact favour France French friends Germany give golf Government hand hill Hobhouse House of Commons House of Lords Huggins Imperial India interest Italy Jacopo Jebusites Jerusalem Josephus King labour Lady Byron land less letter live London Lord Byron Louis XVIII ment Meredith Metternich mind Minister modern moral Murat Napoleon nation native nature negro never official Ophel Parliament party perhaps political poor present Prince Prussia question records Referendum reform social South spirit Stoicism Swiss Switzerland things tion Todi Unionist United Kingdom valley wall whole writes wrote