The Quarterly Review, Volume 28William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1823 |
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... Queen of France and Nayarre ; to which are added , Recollections , Sketches , and Anecdotes , illustrative of the Reigns of Louis XIV . , Louis XV . and Louis XVI . By Madame Campan , First Femme- de - Chambre to the Queen . X. ROYAL ...
... Queen of France and Nayarre ; to which are added , Recollections , Sketches , and Anecdotes , illustrative of the Reigns of Louis XIV . , Louis XV . and Louis XVI . By Madame Campan , First Femme- de - Chambre to the Queen . X. ROYAL ...
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... Queen of Portugal , in honour of this new object of devotion , where the altar - piece by Pompeio Battoni represents the heart in the heavens , radiating with glory . The court of Rome in vain represented the new worship as purely ...
... Queen of Portugal , in honour of this new object of devotion , where the altar - piece by Pompeio Battoni represents the heart in the heavens , radiating with glory . The court of Rome in vain represented the new worship as purely ...
Página 199
... queen was solemnly arraigned at the bar of the House of Peers . Before one syllable was offered in disproof of the charges brought against her , the lower orders in almost all parts of the country voted her addresses compounded of equal ...
... queen was solemnly arraigned at the bar of the House of Peers . Before one syllable was offered in disproof of the charges brought against her , the lower orders in almost all parts of the country voted her addresses compounded of equal ...
Página 256
... queen , came to see her at Versailles , on the 5th or 6th October , where he remained all night . The palace was stormed by the populace . Marie Antoinette fled undressed from her own chamber to that of the king for shelter , and the ...
... queen , came to see her at Versailles , on the 5th or 6th October , where he remained all night . The palace was stormed by the populace . Marie Antoinette fled undressed from her own chamber to that of the king for shelter , and the ...
Página 257
... queen passed every moment of that horrible interval : every body knows that the palace had been blockaded from an early hour in the evening by fiends , who particularly besieged the apartments of the queen ; the female part of the crowd ...
... queen passed every moment of that horrible interval : every body knows that the palace had been blockaded from an early hour in the evening by fiends , who particularly besieged the apartments of the queen ; the female part of the crowd ...
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ancient appears Arago Archibald Edmonstone Archipelago assembly Avignon believe Bencoolen Buonaparte Buonaparte's called Captain Franklin cause Champollion character Christian church circumstances colonies conduct constitution Dendera doubt Duke of Orleans Egypt endeavoured England English Enterprize Europe fact favour feelings France French French revolution give Greece Greek Gregoire heart honour important inhabitants instance interest islands king labour language laws letter liberty Lord Madame Campan manner Marie Antoinette means ment mind ministers moral nation nature navigation never nutmeg O'Meara object observed opinion original Paris party perhaps persons Pindar political poor possession present principles produce Ptolemy queen racter readers religion remarkable respect revolution river royal says sect Shendi ships Sir Hudson Lowe slaves society Spain spirit supposed Sylla temple Theophilanthropists thing tion truth Whigs whole words writing zodiac
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