An Historical Review of the Spanish Revolution: Including Some Account of Religion, Manners, and Literature, in SpainG. & W.B. Whittaker, 1822 - 656 sider |
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Side xiv
... already communicated from the Peninsula to Italy and Greece , be conducted with the firmness and wisdom , which have hitherto marked its progress , in the land of Pelagius and Themis- tocles , it is not within human comprehen- sion to ...
... already communicated from the Peninsula to Italy and Greece , be conducted with the firmness and wisdom , which have hitherto marked its progress , in the land of Pelagius and Themis- tocles , it is not within human comprehen- sion to ...
Side 2
... already produced : even the sombre ca- pital of Navarre seemed to have thrown off its pro- verbial gloom ; and in proportion as I advanced towards the interior , the scene became more gay and animated . These While passing over the fine ...
... already produced : even the sombre ca- pital of Navarre seemed to have thrown off its pro- verbial gloom ; and in proportion as I advanced towards the interior , the scene became more gay and animated . These While passing over the fine ...
Side 37
... already think they hear the voice of your Majesty , that you have arrived amongst your faithful subjects , and that we have placed in your hands that power , of which we have been only the depositaries , and whose weight is oppressive ...
... already think they hear the voice of your Majesty , that you have arrived amongst your faithful subjects , and that we have placed in your hands that power , of which we have been only the depositaries , and whose weight is oppressive ...
Side 40
... already mentioned , and which , according to a passage in one of his letters to the Regency , " contained no condition that did not accord with the honour , glory and interests of the Spanish nation ; for , it could not have obtained a ...
... already mentioned , and which , according to a passage in one of his letters to the Regency , " contained no condition that did not accord with the honour , glory and interests of the Spanish nation ; for , it could not have obtained a ...
Side 54
... already instructed how to act , that one party headed by the Vicar of La Trappe , whose convent had been recently established by a decree of Cortes , actually assailed the prison of La Corona in which the deputies were confined , and ...
... already instructed how to act , that one party headed by the Vicar of La Trappe , whose convent had been recently established by a decree of Cortes , actually assailed the prison of La Corona in which the deputies were confined , and ...
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An Historical Review of the Spanish Revolution: Including Some Account of ... Edward Blaquière Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1822 |
An Historical Review of the Spanish Revolution: Including Some Account of ... Edward Blaquiere Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2015 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
accused addressed Afrancesados alluded amongst Andalusia appointed Arguelles army arrest arrival authorities Bayonne Cadiz calumnies Catalonia cause celebrated Ceuta charges Charles IV chief commenced commission condemned conduct confined constitution Cortes Corunna council of Castile court crime decree deputies despotism effect enemies Europe event exile favour Ferdinand VII former France freedom Freyre friends Galicia garrison Holy Office honour Inquisition Inquisitor interests Isla Joseph Bonaparte judges Junta justice King Joseph King's Lacy laws less letter liberal liberty Llorente Macanaz Madrid Majesty March ment military ministers monarch motives Napoleon nation opinion Pamplona party patriots Peninsula persecution persons political Porlier present Prince prisoners proceedings proclaiming proved provinces punishment Quiroga Regency regiment reign rendered restored Riego royal order sentence servile faction soldiers sovereign Spain Spanish suffered throne tion treaty trial tribunal troops Valençay Valencia victims Villela virtue whole writer Zaragoza
Populære avsnitt
Side 652 - ... by the prelates of the dioceses, and by the kings who have assured to them the full exercise thereof, observing in this double...
Side 645 - Napoleon, by the grace of God and the constitution, emperor of the French, king of Italy, and protector of the confederation of the Rhine...
Side 127 - C'est moi qui ai formé l'armée anglaise dans la Péninsule. Les événements ont prouvé que j'avais fait une grande faute dans le choix de mes moyens ; car la faute est dans les moyens bien plus que dans les principes. Il est hors de doute que, dans la crise où se trouvait la France, dans la lutte des idées nouvelles, dans la grande cause du siècle contre le reste de l'Europe...
Side 616 - ... have been passed in the midst of tribulations. He was, for several years, deprived of all communication and correspondence, except with the few imbecile courtiers who were appointed to watch his person. Oct. 6, 1801, he was married to Maria Antonia Theresa of Bourbon, a princess of Naples, his cousin. This princess was highly accomplished. Possessing an elevated mind, and great independence of character, she soon opened the eyes of her husband to the scandalous proceedings of the court. Ferdinand,...
Side 386 - May, for the purpose of proclaiming the approaching ceremony, calling on the faithful to attend, and promising those indulgences which the sovereign pontiffs had ordained in their various decrees. The following is a literal translation of the proclamation which was repeated eight times, in different parts of the city, and before the royal family, who were seated in a balcony of the alcazar or palace, as the procession passed : ' Be it known to all the inhabitants of Madrid, and those of the neighbouring...
Side 387 - June, when all those destined to take an active part in the ceremony of the following day attended ; and amongst others, the Duke of Medinaceli, bearing the standard of Faith. " Passing before the palace, to the sound of instruments, and chaunting the Miserere, the procession moved on to the Brasero, or place of execution, where one of the symbols of Christianity was planted and consecrated on a pedestal prepared for its reception. As to the standard and green cross, they were destined to ornament...
Side 127 - ... laisser l'Espagne en arrière, à la disposition de nos ennemis : il fallait l'enchaîner, de gré ou de force, dans notre système. Le destin de la France le demandait ainsi, et le code du salut des nations n'est pas toujours celui des particuliers. D'ailleurs, à la nécessité de la politique se joignait ici, pour moi, la force du droit.
Side 649 - Emperor of the French, King of Italy, Protector of the Confederation of the Rhine, Mediator of the Swiss Confederation.
Side 312 - Such," says San Miguel, the narrator, " wac the fate of a column, worthy by its patriotism and valour of the •most brilliant triumphs. Where so many concurrent circumstances combined against us, it was morally impossible for the result to be different. Fanaticism on the part of an enemy always more than triple our number ; dismay and timidity in the well affected ; pusillanimity and weakness in those who abandoned us in the hour of danger ; the violation of promises by those...
Side 394 - Valdes, anofficer high in the sacred tribunal, followed, to bear testimony to the event. When those victims, who are described in another account as pale, languid, and woebegone, • the very emblems of despair, had been led off, the secretaries proceeded with the trials and sentences of those convicted of superstition, sorcery, bigamy, and as impostors and hypocrites. It was nine o'clock before the prisoners were assembled round the Grand Inquisitor, to go through the different forms of abjuration....