The Court of the Tuileries: From the Restoration to the Flight of Louis Philippe, Band 2

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Scribner & Welford, 1884
 

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Seite 131 - Take heed therefore how ye hear: for whosoever hath, to him shall be given ; and whosoever hath not, from him shall be taken even that which he seemeth to have.
Seite 220 - ... pourvu que je ne parle en mes écrits ni de l'autorité, ni du culte, ni de la politique, ni de la morale, ni des gens en place, ni des corps en crédit, ni de l'opéra, ni des autres spectacles, ni de personne qui tienne à quelque chose, je puis tout imprimer librement, sous l'inspection de deux ou trois censeurs.
Seite 171 - Missouri for the purpose of erecting a monument to the memory of the late...
Seite 32 - Go, tell your master," replied Mirabeau, in a voice of thunder, to the marquis's message, " that we are here by the will of the people, and will remain here, unless thrust out at the point of the bayonet.
Seite i - THE COURT OF THE TUILERIES, from the Restoration to the Flight of Louis Philippe.
Seite 344 - The elder branch of the House of Bourbon no longer reigns in France, and the Duke of Orleans has been called to the throne by the title of King of the French.
Seite 24 - ... that the uncertainty of the sex of the child which the widow of the Duke de Berry then bore in her womb, leaving the crown without any certain heir after himself and the Duke d'Angouleme, it would be his policy to do violence to his grief, and to marry again. It is even said that he proposed to him to marry the widow of the King of Etruria, daughter of Charles IV., King of Spain, whose son he might adopt, a Bourbon of the Spanish branch, and to whom he could devolve the crown in removing, by...
Seite 65 - He kept me an hour and a half in his cabinet preaching to me ; I resisting. At length he ordered me to obey. I obeyed; so that I do not return to London. I remain with you. But this ministry will kill me.
Seite 129 - Those exceptions were the Duke of Wellington, after the battle of Waterloo, and Lord Moira, who was an intimate personal friend of Louis XVIII.
Seite 131 - Crosses — given, in many instances, on the battle-field — or for some compensation for its withdrawal, the general's protdgds were told that they had neither part nor lot in the matter.

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