Fraser's Magazine for Town and Country, Volumen22 |
Dentro del libro
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
Thank you — very kind , ' replied Greville , suppressing the inward sense of horror wbich the bare idea of a colonial edition of his Shamboro ' campaign suggested ; but I've no money to spend in electioneering ; and I came out here in ...
Thank you — very kind , ' replied Greville , suppressing the inward sense of horror wbich the bare idea of a colonial edition of his Shamboro ' campaign suggested ; but I've no money to spend in electioneering ; and I came out here in ...
Página 30
We have lately heard the story of the Englishman who landed at a Dalmatian - that is , in one sense , an Austrian - port , and expected that the people of that port would speak the Austrian language . His argument was as good as any of ...
We have lately heard the story of the Englishman who landed at a Dalmatian - that is , in one sense , an Austrian - port , and expected that the people of that port would speak the Austrian language . His argument was as good as any of ...
Página 31
The diplomatist , of whatever rank - he who ought to know , and who in a certain sense does know , more of foreign affairs than any private man can know — is of all men the most exposed to influences which are likely to make him ...
The diplomatist , of whatever rank - he who ought to know , and who in a certain sense does know , more of foreign affairs than any private man can know — is of all men the most exposed to influences which are likely to make him ...
Página 32
But it will be a very unreal and unpractical kind of action if any English statesman is led by the habitual use of conventional forms to forget that those governments ' are not governments in the same sense as those of England , France ...
But it will be a very unreal and unpractical kind of action if any English statesman is led by the habitual use of conventional forms to forget that those governments ' are not governments in the same sense as those of England , France ...
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