The Life and Times of Henry, Lord Brougham, 第 2 巻W. Blackwood, 1871 |
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... England had been content to remain quiet , and had left France and the neutral states to fight it out , it is extremely probable that our trade would in the long - run have gained rather than lost - at least , as long as we could ...
... England had been content to remain quiet , and had left France and the neutral states to fight it out , it is extremely probable that our trade would in the long - run have gained rather than lost - at least , as long as we could ...
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... England , he came into Parliament under the auspices of his great friend Perceval ; for Stephen was a member of the Evangelical party , to which Perceval had a strong leaning , although he did not actually belong to it . As a speaker he ...
... England , he came into Parliament under the auspices of his great friend Perceval ; for Stephen was a member of the Evangelical party , to which Perceval had a strong leaning , although he did not actually belong to it . As a speaker he ...
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... England had more than once rejected the measure for the aboli- tion of slavery ! —a somewhat unfair appreciation of the justice of Providence , seeing that so many of the Con- tinental countries which had suffered most from Napo ...
... England had more than once rejected the measure for the aboli- tion of slavery ! —a somewhat unfair appreciation of the justice of Providence , seeing that so many of the Con- tinental countries which had suffered most from Napo ...
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... England , agreed to the Elba and Parma parts ; but inasmuch as Great Britain had never acknowledged Napoleon either as emperor or as sovereign of France , he declined to be a party to the treaty ; so that the parties to the convention ...
... England , agreed to the Elba and Parma parts ; but inasmuch as Great Britain had never acknowledged Napoleon either as emperor or as sovereign of France , he declined to be a party to the treaty ; so that the parties to the convention ...
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... England , inflamed by our folly in sending Wellington there , the state of parties and of individuals , the love of war and horror of losing Belgium , the Slave - Trade , with various other matters . By letter one can't say anything ...
... England , inflamed by our folly in sending Wellington there , the state of parties and of individuals , the love of war and horror of losing Belgium , the Slave - Trade , with various other matters . By letter one can't say anything ...
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多く使われている語句
advisers answer appear avait believe bien bill Bonaparte BROUGHAM called Carlton House Castlereagh certainly Chancellor communication conduct considered course Court Crown daughter DEAR BROUGHAM,-I DEAR LORD GREY,-I debate declaration Denman desire difficulty doubt Duke of Sussex EARL GREY Edinburgh Review England favour fear feel following letter France friends give Government hear heard Holland honour hope House of Commons Howick J'ai King King's Lady Charlotte Lindsay least London Lord Grey Lord Liverpool Majesty Majesty's matter measures ment ministers Miss Mercer mother never opinion Orders in Council Parliament party political Pray present Prince of Orange Prince's Princess Charlotte Princess of Wales proceedings Queen received refused Regent respect Romilly Royal Highness seems sent soon speech suppose sure taken thing tion took Tory town truly Wellington Whig Whitbread whole wish write wrote yesterday
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162 ページ - It is my earnest prayer, for her own sake, as well as her country's, that your Royal Highness may be induced to pause before this point be reached. " Those who have advised you, sir, to delay so long the period of my daughter's commencing her intercourse with the world-, and for that purpose to make Windsor her residence, appear not to have regarded the interruptions to her education which this arrangement occasions; both by the impossibility of obtaining the attendance of proper teachers, and the...
159 ページ - To see myself cut off from one of the very few domestic enjoyments left me — certainly the only one upon which I set any value, the society of my Child — involves me in such misery as I well know your Royal Highness could never inflict upon me, if you were aware of its bitterness.
216 ページ - ... be the judge, to be his fixed and unalterable determination not to meet the Princess of Wales upon any occasion, either in public or private.
401 ページ - ... upon those who give it. Save the country, my lords, from the horrors of this catastrophe ; save yourselves from this peril; rescue that country, of which you are the ornaments, but in which you can...
370 ページ - The Queen commands Mr. Brougham to inform Lord Liverpool, that she has directed her most serious attention to the declared sense of Parliament, as to the propriety of some amicable adjustment of existing differences being attempted ; and submitting to that high authority with the gratitude due to the protection she has always received from it, her Majesty no longer waits for a communication from the Ministers of the Crown, but commands Mr. Brougham to announce her own readiness to consider any arrangement...
163 ページ - Sir, to hear my entreaties upon this serious matter, even if you should listen to other advisers on things of less near concernment to the welfare of our child ? " The pain with which I have at length formed the resolution of addressing myself to your Royal Highness is such as I should in vain attempt to express. If I could...
230 ページ - I think she said, or some such words. ' " The commotion," I answered, " will be excessive ; Carlton House will be attacked— perhaps pulled down ; the soldiers will be ordered out, blood will be shed, and if your Royal Highness were to live a hundred years, it never would be forgotten that your running away from your father's house was the cause of the mischief ; and, you may depend upon it, such is the English people's horror of bloodshed, you never would get over it.
94 ページ - Ward has no heart, they say ; but I deny it : He has a heart, and gets his speeches by it!