History of Europe: From the Fall of Napoleon, in MDCCCXV to the Accession of Louis Napoleon in MDCCCLII, 第 2 巻Harper & Brothers, 1855 |
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vii ページ
... Catholic Religion . - Splitting of Farm.s for political Purposes . -- Pernicious Effects of the Potato . Want of Poor - Laws . - Absentee Proprietors . - Ribbonmen and Secret Societies . -Orange Lodges . - Irregularity and Uncertainty ...
... Catholic Religion . - Splitting of Farm.s for political Purposes . -- Pernicious Effects of the Potato . Want of Poor - Laws . - Absentee Proprietors . - Ribbonmen and Secret Societies . -Orange Lodges . - Irregularity and Uncertainty ...
viii ページ
... Catholic Bill is rejected . - Mr . Peel's Speech against Catholic Emancipation.- Ministerial Measure on the Corn Laws . - Result of the Debate in the Commons and Lords . - Important and curious things occurring in the course of the ...
... Catholic Bill is rejected . - Mr . Peel's Speech against Catholic Emancipation.- Ministerial Measure on the Corn Laws . - Result of the Debate in the Commons and Lords . - Important and curious things occurring in the course of the ...
4 ページ
... Catholic Celt under Protestant and Orange dom- indeed , where the horsemen of the Osmanlis have found it easy to extend their ravages , and the pachas their oppression , the human race has in many places wholly disappeared , and the ...
... Catholic Celt under Protestant and Orange dom- indeed , where the horsemen of the Osmanlis have found it easy to extend their ravages , and the pachas their oppression , the human race has in many places wholly disappeared , and the ...
6 ページ
... Catholics 640,000 260,000 Jews 70,000 80,000 Divers others 13,000,000 Syrians .. 900,000 Druses . 30,000 30,000 150,000 Kurds . 1,000,000 1,000,000 300,000 Turcomans .. 85,000 85,000 35,350,000 15,500,000 16,050,000 3,800,000 35,330.000 ...
... Catholics 640,000 260,000 Jews 70,000 80,000 Divers others 13,000,000 Syrians .. 900,000 Druses . 30,000 30,000 150,000 Kurds . 1,000,000 1,000,000 300,000 Turcomans .. 85,000 85,000 35,350,000 15,500,000 16,050,000 3,800,000 35,330.000 ...
126 ページ
... Catholic in the ministers of state , who indeed priesthood . He had been in former times pas were as favorable to the royal cause The secret sionately attached to a very charming lady , as any that he could well have se- Camarilla of ...
... Catholic in the ministers of state , who indeed priesthood . He had been in former times pas were as favorable to the royal cause The secret sionately attached to a very charming lady , as any that he could well have se- Camarilla of ...
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多く使われている語句
Abbas Mirza Ali Pacha arms army artillery Asia attack battalions battle of Navarino besieged brought campaign cause cavalry Chamber Charles X Christian command commenced Constantinople coup d'état danger Danube defense Diebitch Duke duty effect empire enemy England entire Europe favor fire fleet Fonton force fortress France French garrison Gordon Greece Greeks Guard guns Hist horse hostility House hundred immense important infantry inhabitants insurrection janizaries July King land Liberal Louis measures ment military Ministers Moldavia monarchy Morea Mussulmans nation Navarino never ordonnances Ottoman Pacha Paris party Paskewitch passed Polignac Porte Prince prosperity rendered resistance Restoration Revolution royal Royalist ruin Russian Schumla Seraskier ships sians side siege Silistria soon Souliotes strength Sublime Porte success Sultan thing thousand throne tion took town treaty troops Turkey Turkish Turks utmost Valentini vigor viii Wallachia whole
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27 ページ - The isles of Greece! the isles of Greece! Where burning Sappho loved and sung, Where grew the arts of war and peace, Where Delos rose, and Phoebus sprung! Eternal summer gilds them yet, But all, except their sun, is set.
263 ページ - Will you to the utmost of your power maintain the laws of God, the true profession of the Gospel, and the Protestant reformed religion established by law ; and will you preserve unto the bishops and clergy of this realm, and to the churches committed to their charge, all such rights and privileges as by law do or shall appertain unto them, or any of them ? ' King or queen :
20 ページ - Thus every good his native wilds impart, Imprints the patriot passion on his heart; And e'en those hills that round his mansion rise, Enhance the bliss his scanty fund supplies. Dear is that shed to which his soul conforms, And dear that hill which lifts him to the storms...
233 ページ - That the maxim of buying in the cheapest market, and selling in the dearest, which regulates every merchant in his individual dealings, is strictly applicable, as the best rule for the trade of the whole nation.
279 ページ - Let us fly to the aid of Portugal, by whomsoever attacked, because it is our duty to do so ; and let us cease our interference where that duty ends. We go to Portugal not to rule, not to dictate, not to prescribe constitutions, but to defend and to preserve the independence of an ally. We go to plant the standard of England on the well-known heights of Lisbon. Where that standard is planted foreign dominion shall not come.
247 ページ - ... ships of those countries, allowing the latter to import all articles, the growth, produce, or manufacture of the country to which the ship belongs, and to export from such Colonies all articles whatever of their growth, produce, or manufacture, either to the country from which such ship came, or to any other part of the world, the United Kingdom, and all its dependencies, excepted. All intercourse between the Mother Country and the Colonies, whether direct or circuitous, and all intercourse of...
302 ページ - You will consider whether the removal of these disabilities can be effected, consistently with the full and permanent security of our Establishments in Church and State...
292 ページ - ... Notwithstanding the valour displayed by the combined fleet, His Majesty deeply laments that this conflict should have occurred with the naval force of an ancient ally ; but he still entertains a confident hope that this untoward event will not be followed by further hostilities, and will not impede that amicable adjustment of the existing differences between the Porte and the Greeks, to which it is so manifestly their common interest to accede.
338 ページ - Europe has been established, will offer the best security for the repose of the world. I have not yet accredited my ambassador to the court of Lisbon ; but the Portuguese government having determined to perform a great act of justice and humanity, by the grant of a general amnesty, I think that the time may shortly arrive, when the interests of my subjects will demand a renewal of those relations which had so long existed between the two countries.
279 ページ - ... of confidence and security; but in the situation in which this country stands, our business is not to seek opportunities of displaying it, but to content ourselves with letting the professors of violent and exaggerated doctrines on both sides feel, that it is not their interest to convert an umpire into an adversary. The situation of England, amidst the struggle of political opinions which agitates more or less sensibly different countries of the world, may be compared to that of the Ruler of...