The Family Library (Harper)., Volume 24

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1846
 

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Page 90 - All murder'd : for within the hollow crown That rounds the mortal temples of a king Keeps Death his court, and there the antic sits, Scoffing his state and grinning at his pomp...
Page 79 - It is now two hundred and eighty years that you have been governed by my family. The reign of my ancestors is past, and mine is going to expire. Fatigued by the labours of war, the cares of the cabinet, and the weight of age ; oppressed with the burdens and...
Page 305 - Prussia, shall obtain a national representation and institutions regulated according to the kind of political existence which each of the Governments to which they belong shall think it useful and fitting to grant them.
Page 270 - It may appear incredible,'' says Count Oginski, "but I can attest what I have seen, and what a number of witnesses can certify with me, that many women miscarried at the tidings ; many invalids were seized with burning fevers ; some fell into fits of madness which never...
Page 319 - ... were all ordered to be flogged with the utmost severity ! The unhappy offender declared that he had written the offensive words. The Grand Duke condemned him to be a soldier for life, incapable of advancement in the army ; and when his mother threw herself before his carriage to implore forgiveness for her wretched child, he spurned her like a dog with his foot...
Page 302 - I feel great satisfaction, general, in answering your letter. Your wishes shall be accomplished. With the help of the Almighty, I trust to realize the regeneration of the brave and respectable nation to which you belong. I have made a solemn engagement, and its welfare has always occupied my thoughts...
Page 62 - ... nation that had reason to blush at their ignorance in this point They (the ambassadors) spoke our language with so much purity, that one would have taken them rather for men educated on the banks of the Seine and the Loire, than for inhabitants of the countries which are watered by the Vistula or the Dnieper, which put our courtiers to the blush, who knew nothing, but were open enemies of all science ; so that when their guests questioned them, they answered only with signs or blushes.
Page 231 - Poninski for marshal," replied Reyten; and seeing many of the members about to retire, he placed himself before the door with his arms crossed, and attempted to stop the deserters. But his exertions proving useless, he threw himself along the doorway, exclaiming, with a wearied but determined voice, "Go, go, and seal your own eternal ruin, but first trample on the breast which will only beat for...
Page 323 - London, whose personal suffering may be considered a fair example of the system pursued. His career may be described as one of pain and misery. His father — a distinguished champion of the liberties of his country at the period of the last partition — was expatriated ; being accompanied with his wife, the subject of the present detail was born during their flight, and was seized with his father's property by the government! He was placed with a man •who appears to have possessed some of the...
Page 64 - only a military body, and not a nation, as some have imagined. We cannot compare them better than to the ' Francarchers' formerly established in France by Charles VII." They made periodical naval expeditions every season against the Turks, and have even advanced within two leagues of Constantinople. Their rendezvous was in the islands of the Dnieper ; and when winter approached, they returned to their homes. They generally mustered 5000 or 6000 men ; their boats were sixty feet long, with ten or...

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