A Memoir of the Right Honourable Hugh ElliotEdmonston and Douglas, 1868 - 436 sider |
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Side 3
... lived to give her entire confidence to her eldest son , and to be on terms approaching to estrange- ment with the younger . To a want therefore of home sunshine , it is possible that we may in part ascribe the fact that the letters ...
... lived to give her entire confidence to her eldest son , and to be on terms approaching to estrange- ment with the younger . To a want therefore of home sunshine , it is possible that we may in part ascribe the fact that the letters ...
Side 4
... lived at Twick- enham , and to have prosecuted the ordinary studies of their age under his superintendence . Towards the end of 1764 they went to Paris , where they spent two years in a military school , directed by the Abbé Choquart ...
... lived at Twick- enham , and to have prosecuted the ordinary studies of their age under his superintendence . Towards the end of 1764 they went to Paris , where they spent two years in a military school , directed by the Abbé Choquart ...
Side 7
... lived in Edinburgh . After a slight illness of Hugh's in 1766 , Mr. Stuart writes as follows to Sir Gilbert : - " Hugh's popularity is such that since he has been allowed to see any one his levée has been crowded . " In the same letter ...
... lived in Edinburgh . After a slight illness of Hugh's in 1766 , Mr. Stuart writes as follows to Sir Gilbert : - " Hugh's popularity is such that since he has been allowed to see any one his levée has been crowded . " In the same letter ...
Side 41
... lived did such dis- cussions make them ! All glory to English influences , which , in the midst of idle dissipation , can still suffice to raise ennobling aspirations . To borrow a phrase of South's , " leaning on hope's anchor , they ...
... lived did such dis- cussions make them ! All glory to English influences , which , in the midst of idle dissipation , can still suffice to raise ennobling aspirations . To borrow a phrase of South's , " leaning on hope's anchor , they ...
Side 44
... lived . To these accusations Mr. Liston replied in detail.1 The first charge he dismissed at once , by the statement that from the moment my grandfather had perceived the inadequacy of his means to support the ministerial dignity ...
... lived . To these accusations Mr. Liston replied in detail.1 The first charge he dismissed at once , by the statement that from the moment my grandfather had perceived the inadequacy of his means to support the ministerial dignity ...
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Acton admiration affairs appears army arrived beautiful Berlin bien Bonaparte British brother c'est Cardito cœur conduct confidence Copenhagen correspondence Count Bernstorff Countess cour Court d'être d'une daughter described despatches Duke Eleanor enemy England English minister été être fait faut feelings foreign France Frederick French give Gothenburg Government grandfather grandfather's Harris Hesse homme honour Hugh Elliot Hugh's Isabella j'ai jours King King of Sweden King's kingdom of Naples Lady Elliot letters Liston lived Lord North Lord Stormont Lord Suffolk Madame Madame du Deffand Majesty ment military Minto Mirabeau mother Munich n'est Naples Neapolitan never occasion party persons peut political Prince of Prussia Prince Royal Princess Prussia qu'Elle qu'il Queen received Rheinsberg Russian says sentiments Sicily Sir Gilbert société society spirit Sweden tell Thiébault tion tout town troops Vienna wife writing wrote young
Populære passager
Side 97 - Upon her face there was the tint of grief, The settled shadow of an inward strife, And an unquiet drooping of the eye, As if its lid were charged with unshed tears.
Side 124 - Alas ! — how light a cause may move Dissension between hearts that love ! Hearts that the world in vain had tried, And sorrow but more closely tied ; That stood the storm, when waves were rough, Yet in a sunny hour fall off, Like ships that have gone down at sea, When heaven was all tranquillity...
Side 116 - Why, madam," said he with wonderful readiness, "it is called a stifled sigh because it is checked in its progress, and only half a colour.
Side 233 - Belvidera ! Oh ! she is my wife And we will bear our wayward fate together, But ne'er know comfort more.
Side 145 - It is almost certain that a man without a garden goes to the public house; and he cannot do so without spending money, which would be useful on his children's back, or in the purchase of household comforts. Many an industrious man, unused to tippling, has been totally ruined by his leisure; and "it is much to be regretted that there are no means of profitably employing the interval between business and bed time. If a man has his garden, he blends amusement with labour, and profit with both. Gardening...
Side 157 - ... was his remark as the prospect darkened, ' is that, instead of being the first people in the world, we shall be the second.' Lady Minto gives the following version of a story which has been told in many ways: — 'A vulgar Frenchman who had just heard of the acknowledgment by France of the independence of America, came up to my grandfather, and, thrusting his face in that of the English Minister, said with a sneer — " Voila un fameux soufflet que la France a donnc a l
Side 233 - Reduce the glittering trappings of thy wife To humble weeds, fit for thy little state; Then to some suburb cottage both retire; Drudge, to feed loathsome life : get brats, and starve — Home, home, I say. (Exit Priuli.) Jaff.
Side 92 - Rawdon, a very fine fellow and a good soldier, I wish you knew him. We took above £100 at the door. I hear a great many people blame us for acting, and think we might have found something better to do, but General Howe follows the example of the King of Prussia, who, when Prince Ferdinand wrote him a long letter, mentioning all the difficulties and distresses of the army, sent back the following concise answer: De la gaiete, encore de la gaiete, et toujours de la gaiete.
Side 51 - Self-deceived even more than deceived by others, they have still to learn that life will reflect their own image — " as in water face answcreth to face, so the heart of man to man.
Side 273 - He is very much ripened in his abilities, which are really considerable, and has acquired a great store of knowledge Mirabeau is as overbearing in his conversation as awkward in his graces, as ugly and misshapen in face and person, as dirty in his dress, and withal as perfectly suffisant, as we remember him twenty years ago at school. I loved him, however, then, and so did you, though, as he confesses, you sometimes...