The London Quarterly Review, Volume 15Theodore Foster, 1817 |
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Page 1
... given birth , the two most interesting are , beyond doubt , Madame Roland's Appeal to Fosterity ; and the Me- moirs of the Marchioness de la Roche Jaquelein . The most in- jured royalist could not peruse the former without feeling some ...
... given birth , the two most interesting are , beyond doubt , Madame Roland's Appeal to Fosterity ; and the Me- moirs of the Marchioness de la Roche Jaquelein . The most in- jured royalist could not peruse the former without feeling some ...
Page 14
... given in the words of a French biographer . We translate the pas- sage ; because it ought not to be presumed in this country that every person can read a language which it is scarcely possible to read without contracting some pollution ...
... given in the words of a French biographer . We translate the pas- sage ; because it ought not to be presumed in this country that every person can read a language which it is scarcely possible to read without contracting some pollution ...
Page 19
... given to set Clisson on fire , when the hearts were discovered . The insurgents now threatened Bressuire , and all at Clisson were full of hope . The next day they were repulsed , and all the national guards of the country round were ...
... given to set Clisson on fire , when the hearts were discovered . The insurgents now threatened Bressuire , and all at Clisson were full of hope . The next day they were repulsed , and all the national guards of the country round were ...
Page 25
... given it this name ; and believing that it was a certain pledge of victory , had begun to regard it as something miraculous ; so that they had adorned it with flowers and ribands , and embraced it , as the Marchioness did also at their ...
... given it this name ; and believing that it was a certain pledge of victory , had begun to regard it as something miraculous ; so that they had adorned it with flowers and ribands , and embraced it , as the Marchioness did also at their ...
Page 26
... given any outward sign of rebellion : the insti- tution of juries was suspended : every man taken with arms was to be put to death within four and twenty hours ; and the evidence of a single witness , before a military commission , was ...
... given any outward sign of rebellion : the insti- tution of juries was suspended : every man taken with arms was to be put to death within four and twenty hours ; and the evidence of a single witness , before a military commission , was ...
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Algiers Ali Bey ancient appear arms army Bashaw Bressuire called cause character Charette Chateaubriand chief Chinese Chinese language Christian circumstances death desert dreadful England English Euripides evil faith father favour Fazio feeling France French friends ground Guy Mannering habits hand head heart honour human inhabitants insanity instances Kaaba Khan king La Vendée labour language laws Lescure less Lord Mahomed Mahommedan Malcolm manner Marchioness means Mecca ment mind moral Morocco Mount Arafat mountains Mukran murdered Nadir Shah nation nature never object observed peasants Persia person poor possession Pottinger present prince principles prisoners racter readers reign religion republicans respect Roche Jaquelein royalists says Shah Shah Nameh Sidi slaves sovereign spirit sultan supposed Tangiers thing thousand tion town traveller Tripoli troops Vendeans Vendée Wahabees whole women γὰρ καὶ