Fraser's Magazine for Town and Country, Volumen22 |
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Página 11
To give Augustus his due , it must be recorded that for the moment every thought of selfish amusements - everything , in fact , but the sense of a terrible shock at the fate of his friend - vanished from his mind .
To give Augustus his due , it must be recorded that for the moment every thought of selfish amusements - everything , in fact , but the sense of a terrible shock at the fate of his friend - vanished from his mind .
Página 21
He talked of the weather , of the charming climate of the colony , of the attachment of himself and his colleagues to Sir Hector - whom they had , in fact , bullied into the resignation of his post . Apropos of Sir Hector , reference ...
He talked of the weather , of the charming climate of the colony , of the attachment of himself and his colleagues to Sir Hector - whom they had , in fact , bullied into the resignation of his post . Apropos of Sir Hector , reference ...
Página 26
After a very hearty expression of pleasure at hearing of Charles's arrival , which fact she had already communicated to the individual chiefly interested , she gave him the substance of the opinion of the Madeira physician who had ...
After a very hearty expression of pleasure at hearing of Charles's arrival , which fact she had already communicated to the individual chiefly interested , she gave him the substance of the opinion of the Madeira physician who had ...
Página 29
It might be used out of simple ignorance of the plainest facts on the part of the speaker . But let us , as is becoming , put both these suppositions aside . There remains a remarkable instance of that process of confusion of thought ...
It might be used out of simple ignorance of the plainest facts on the part of the speaker . But let us , as is becoming , put both these suppositions aside . There remains a remarkable instance of that process of confusion of thought ...
Página 32
Only those facts were so utterly contrary to diplomatic formula and diplomatic conventional assumptions that he forgot the facts in the ... He knew the facts ; yet he thought , spoke , and acted , exactly as if he had not known them .
Only those facts were so utterly contrary to diplomatic formula and diplomatic conventional assumptions that he forgot the facts in the ... He knew the facts ; yet he thought , spoke , and acted , exactly as if he had not known them .
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