The Life of Henry John Temple, Viscount Palmerston: With Selections from His Diaries and Correspondence, Volum 1J.B. Lippincott & Company, 1871 |
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Side vii
... foreign policy , and this at a time when foreign * I should say that the value of this hitherto unpublished corre- spondence consists in its showing not merely the outside which is contained in official documents , but the inside of ...
... foreign policy , and this at a time when foreign * I should say that the value of this hitherto unpublished corre- spondence consists in its showing not merely the outside which is contained in official documents , but the inside of ...
Side viii
... Foreign Affairs Minister was formed , and his talents as a statesman acknowledged . It begins with a certain struggle against the resistance of the Northern Cabinets to any liberal change in the affairs of Europe , and a struggle , at ...
... Foreign Affairs Minister was formed , and his talents as a statesman acknowledged . It begins with a certain struggle against the resistance of the Northern Cabinets to any liberal change in the affairs of Europe , and a struggle , at ...
Side xiv
... foreign and home politics - Extracts from journal beginning March 9 , 1828 , and including a long , detailed , and interesting account of the events which led to the withdrawal of Mr. Huskisson from the Duke of Wel- lington's government ...
... foreign and home politics - Extracts from journal beginning March 9 , 1828 , and including a long , detailed , and interesting account of the events which led to the withdrawal of Mr. Huskisson from the Duke of Wel- lington's government ...
Side 19
... Foreign Affairs . Home Secretary .... Prime Minister ........................ .. { { .20 Oct. , 1784 .17 April , 1802 27 Jan. , 1806 ..3 April , 1807 - Oct . , 1809 .28 Oct. , 1809-26 May , 1828 22 Nov. , 1830-15 Nov. , 1834 18 April ...
... Foreign Affairs . Home Secretary .... Prime Minister ........................ .. { { .20 Oct. , 1784 .17 April , 1802 27 Jan. , 1806 ..3 April , 1807 - Oct . , 1809 .28 Oct. , 1809-26 May , 1828 22 Nov. , 1830-15 Nov. , 1834 18 April ...
Side 24
... foreign affairs , admire the classic oratory of Canning , prove industrious in office , speak a good deal without com- promising himself , keep race - horses , have a good appetite , and be generally at once what is so charming and so ...
... foreign affairs , admire the classic oratory of Canning , prove industrious in office , speak a good deal without com- promising himself , keep race - horses , have a good appetite , and be generally at once what is so charming and so ...
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The Life of Henry John Temple, Viscount Palmerston: With Selections ..., Volum 1 Henry Lytton Bulwer Baron Dalling and Bulwer Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1871 |
The Life of Henry John Temple, Viscount Palmerston: With Selections ..., Volum 1 Henry Lytton Bulwer Baron Dalling and Bulwer Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1871 |
The Life of Henry John Temple, Viscount Palmerston: With Selections ..., Volum 1 Henry Lytton Bulwer Baron Dalling and Bulwer Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1871 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Adieu Admiralty affairs affectionately afterward appointment army arrangement Bassetlaw Bathurst bill Cabinet Cambridge Canningites Catholic question Chancellor Commander-in-Chief DEAR LORD MALMESBURY DEAR WILLIAM debate declared dispatch doubt Dudley Duke of Wellington duke's Dundas election England Exchequer favor feel Foreign France French friends give Goderich Grant Greece Greek Herries honor House of Commons Huskisson Ireland king king's Lamb letter Lord Grenville Lord Howick Lord Ligonier Lord Liverpool Lord Malmesbury Lord Palmerston Lord Sidmouth Majesty March matter means Melville ment Miguel military Milnes ministers never object offer opinion Parliament party Peel Penryn Perceval Polignac political Portugal probably proposed received regiments resignation Retford Russia Secretary Secretary at War seems sent session speech STANHOPE STREET Sulivan Temple things thought tion told Tories town Treasury treaty troops Turkey vote War Office Whigs wished wrote
Populære avsnitt
Side 89 - That part of the island we had landed on was a narrow ridge, not above musket-shot across, bounded on one side by the sea, and on the other by a creek, extending upwards of a mile inland, and nearly communicating with the sea at its head.
Side 324 - One condition required was that I should never, even for the election, set foot in the place ; so jealous was the patron lest any attempt should be made to get a new interest in the borough.
Side 125 - Captain and you are also to observe and follow such Orders and Directions as you shall from time to time receive from...
Side 23 - Terence, Ovid, Homer, Greek Testament, and a collection of Greek epigrams, and after the Easter holidays, which are now drawing near, I shall begin Virgil, Horace, and some more. I am perfectly of your opinion concerning drinking and swearing, which, though fashionable at present, I think extremely ungentlemanlike ; as for getting drunk, I can find no pleasure in it.
Side 75 - ... a different course of policy towards the Catholics of Ireland. These opinions they have never concealed from your Majesty ; they continue strongly impressed with them ; and it is obviously indispensable to their public characters that they should openly avow them, both on the present occasion, and in the possible event of the discussion of the Catholic Petition in Parliament...
Side 271 - ... and papers now to be produced. In the last chapter it was shown that great excitement had been caused by the Clare election, and by the speech of Mr. Dawson (Peel's brother-in-law) at Deny, in which a policy of surrender seemed to be hinted at. " The Clare election," as Lord Palmerston declared, " began a new era, and was an epoch in the history of Ireland"!
Side 28 - Lord Randolph Churchill had only just resigned his position as Leader of the House of Commons and Chancellor of the Exchequer, and he still towered in the forefront of politics.
Side 193 - whom the king," says Lord Palmerston (in a short portion of his biography, which I have not quoted here in extenso, because its substance is repeated in the letters I have given), "had thrown like a live shell into the Cabinet to explode and blow us all up.