The North American Review, Band 64Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1847 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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... says that his mind at twenty was by no means so well formed as it ought to have been in a prince of that age . It was not , however , from any want of intelligence , but his thoughts were elsewhere , and Rome , with all the 2 [ Jan ...
... says that his mind at twenty was by no means so well formed as it ought to have been in a prince of that age . It was not , however , from any want of intelligence , but his thoughts were elsewhere , and Rome , with all the 2 [ Jan ...
Seite 3
... says Marshal Berwick in a letter to his brother , " that the worst enemies of the Stuarts could have been witnesses of his conduct during the siege . It would have won many of them back again . " From Gaeta he went to Naples , where he ...
... says Marshal Berwick in a letter to his brother , " that the worst enemies of the Stuarts could have been witnesses of his conduct during the siege . It would have won many of them back again . " From Gaeta he went to Naples , where he ...
Seite 56
... says he , " with the Prince Charles Ed- ward . All this time he led a very retired life , and saw nobody . It was under the last Pope , who had refused to acknowledge his title . In this retirement , he passed the greater part of his ...
... says he , " with the Prince Charles Ed- ward . All this time he led a very retired life , and saw nobody . It was under the last Pope , who had refused to acknowledge his title . In this retirement , he passed the greater part of his ...
Seite 62
... says , un- usual advantages for observing this fearful complaint , of see- ing the paralyzing influence which it exerts upon the mind and the will , and the deadly aversion which it gives to those active efforts in which the only remedy ...
... says , un- usual advantages for observing this fearful complaint , of see- ing the paralyzing influence which it exerts upon the mind and the will , and the deadly aversion which it gives to those active efforts in which the only remedy ...
Seite 63
... says that his book , once taken up , is the most dif- ficult of all others to lay down . Certainly , no man of ... say that he was universally welcome as a " jolly fellow . " was his pleasure to parade those weaknesses which most men ...
... says that his book , once taken up , is the most dif- ficult of all others to lay down . Certainly , no man of ... say that he was universally welcome as a " jolly fellow . " was his pleasure to parade those weaknesses which most men ...
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