Lives of the Queens of England of the House of Hanover, 第 2 巻Redfield, 1855 |
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ix ページ
... Feeling exhibited by the Duke of York - The Prince of Wales incredulous of the recovery of the King - Conver- sation between the King and Dr. Willis - The Queen's anxiety- Particulars of the King's illness - Recovery of the King - Home ...
... Feeling exhibited by the Duke of York - The Prince of Wales incredulous of the recovery of the King - Conver- sation between the King and Dr. Willis - The Queen's anxiety- Particulars of the King's illness - Recovery of the King - Home ...
xiv ページ
... feeling against the Italian witnesses - Dr . Parr's advice to the Queen - His zealous advocacy of her cause - Lord Erskine's efforts in her favour - Her hearty protest against legal oppression - Gross attack on her in a provincial paper ...
... feeling against the Italian witnesses - Dr . Parr's advice to the Queen - His zealous advocacy of her cause - Lord Erskine's efforts in her favour - Her hearty protest against legal oppression - Gross attack on her in a provincial paper ...
2 ページ
... feeling in the breast of George , in very graphic terms : " There was a play at Holland House , acted by children ; not all children , for Lady Sarah Lennox ( subsequently Lady Sarah Napier ) and Lady Susan Strangways played the women ...
... feeling in the breast of George , in very graphic terms : " There was a play at Holland House , acted by children ; not all children , for Lady Sarah Lennox ( subsequently Lady Sarah Napier ) and Lady Susan Strangways played the women ...
5 ページ
... feelings of admiration for the writer . After praising it , the King exclaimed to Lord Hertford , " This is the lady whom I shall select for my consort - here are lasting beauties - the man who has any mind may feast and not be ...
... feelings of admiration for the writer . After praising it , the King exclaimed to Lord Hertford , " This is the lady whom I shall select for my consort - here are lasting beauties - the man who has any mind may feast and not be ...
14 ページ
... feelings of the Monarch were interested ; and the tenderness with which he thenceforward treated Queen Charlotte was uninterrupted until the moment of their final separation . " This probably comes much nearer to the truth than the ...
... feelings of the Monarch were interested ; and the tenderness with which he thenceforward treated Queen Charlotte was uninterrupted until the moment of their final separation . " This probably comes much nearer to the truth than the ...
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addressed affected appeared assertion attendance Augusta Bergami Bishop bride brother Brougham Brunswick called Carlton House Caroline of Brunswick ceremony character conduct consort coronation court crown daughter death declared diamonds dignity dinner Dowager drawing-room dress Duchess Duke of York England English expressed father favour favourite feeling Fitzherbert followed friends George George III George IV hand honour husband James's King and Queen King's kissed knew Lady Sarah Lennox latter less looked Lord Liverpool Lord Malmesbury Majesty Majesty's marriage married ministers Miss Burney monarch mother never night occasion palace parliament party passed perhaps person Pitt popular present Prince of Wales Prince's Princess Caroline Princess Charlotte Princess of Wales proceeding Queen Charlotte Queen Consort Queen's house received Regent remark reply residence respect royal family royal highness says scene sovereign spirit things thought tion told took Walpole wife Windsor witnesses woman young
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387 ページ - And judgment is turned away backward, and justice standeth afar off: for truth is fallen in the street, and equity cannot enter.
256 ページ - ... necessity of great and nice attention to every part of dress, as well as to what was hid as to what was seen. (I knew she wore coarse petticoats, coarse shifts, and thread stockings ; and these never well washed or changed often enough.) I observed that a long toilette was necessary, and gave her no credit for boasting that hers was a ' short ' one. What I could not say myself on this point I got said through women ; through Madame Busche, and afterwards through Mrs. Harcourt. It is remarkable...
203 ページ - Thy prime decree? The sun to me is dark And silent as the moon, When she deserts the night, Hid in her vacant interlunar cave.
268 ページ - Cholmondeley, that even in the event of any accident happening to my daughter, which I trust Providence in its mercy will avert, I shall not infringe the terms of the restriction by proposing, at any period, a connection of a more particular nature.
311 ページ - No, my good people," she said, " be quite quiet — let me pass, and go home to your beds.
280 ページ - ... the personal feelings of His Majesty, in the propriety and correctness of her conduct. And His Majesty cannot therefore forbear to express, in the conclusion of the business, his desire and expectation, that such a conduct may in future be observed •by the Princess, as may fully justify those marks of paternal regard and affection, which the King always wishes to shew to every part of His Royal Family.
7 ページ - The towns are inhabited only by old men, women and children ; perhaps here and there a warrior, by wounds and loss of limbs, rendered unfit for service, left at his door ; his little children hang round him, ask a history of every wound, and grow themselves soldiers before they find strength for the field. But this were nothing, did we not feel the alternate insolence of either army, as it happens to advance or retreat.
259 ページ - I, according to the established etiquette, introduced (no one else being in the room) the Princess Caroline to him. She very properly, in consequence of my saying to her that it was the right mode of proceeding, attempted to kneel to him. He raised her, (gracefully enough,) and embraced her, said barely one word, turned round, retired to a distant part of the apartment, and, calling me to him, said — ' Harris, I am not well ; pray, get me a glass of brandy...
8 ページ - Mecklenburg-Strelitz, a princess distinguished by every eminent virtue and amiable endowment, whose illustrious line has constantly shown the firmest zeal for the Protestant religion, and a particular attachment to my family. "I have...
28 ページ - Roxana, was the finest figure at a distance ; she complained to George Selwyn that she was to walk with Lady Portsmouth, who would have a wig, and a stick — " Pho," said he, "you will only look as if you were taken up by the constable.