Bygone YearsE.P. Dutton, 1905 - 339 sider |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-5 av 54
Side 13
... arrival at Eton , was asked his name , and answered , " I am Viscount Weymouth , and I shall be Marquis of Bath . " Upon which he received two kicks , one for the viscount , and the other for the marquis . This story may not be true ...
... arrival at Eton , was asked his name , and answered , " I am Viscount Weymouth , and I shall be Marquis of Bath . " Upon which he received two kicks , one for the viscount , and the other for the marquis . This story may not be true ...
Side 14
... arrival at Christ Church ; but our satisfaction was a good deal diminished when we learnt that every member was going to leave at the end of the term , and that there was a debt on the club amounting to eighty pounds . The result was ...
... arrival at Christ Church ; but our satisfaction was a good deal diminished when we learnt that every member was going to leave at the end of the term , and that there was a debt on the club amounting to eighty pounds . The result was ...
Side 17
... arrived here yesterday at half - past four . I am much struck with the beauty and comfort of the house , and the view and the gardens in summer must be perfectly beautiful . We find a large family party . . . . .We are to go to Oxford ...
... arrived here yesterday at half - past four . I am much struck with the beauty and comfort of the house , and the view and the gardens in summer must be perfectly beautiful . We find a large family party . . . . .We are to go to Oxford ...
Side 30
... arrival as a bride at Paris , to be blunt and insolent . This made Monsieur Tschann , the Swiss Minister , observe : " Si elle est brutale cela sera rafraîchissant . " She afterwards became Austrian Ambassadress in London , where she ...
... arrival as a bride at Paris , to be blunt and insolent . This made Monsieur Tschann , the Swiss Minister , observe : " Si elle est brutale cela sera rafraîchissant . " She afterwards became Austrian Ambassadress in London , where she ...
Side 32
... arrival of Lord Douglas , the handsome son of the Duke of Hamilton . He had come in order to propose to the Princess Marie in obedience to his father's injunction to marry a royalty . His advances were well received , and we thought the ...
... arrival of Lord Douglas , the handsome son of the Duke of Hamilton . He had come in order to propose to the Princess Marie in obedience to his father's injunction to marry a royalty . His advances were well received , and we thought the ...
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
Bygone Years: Recollections (Classic Reprint) F. Leveson Gower Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2015 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
acquaintance admired afterwards agreeable amusing arrived asked beautiful became Bodmin brother called carriage Ceylon charming Chatsworth Chiswick Church Court daughter delightful Devonshire Devonshire House dined dinner dress Duchess Duke Duke of Devonshire Earl Egerton elephants Emperor England English father favour favourite French friends garden gave Gladstone Granville Grosvenor guests Holmbury honour horses husband India interest invited Jung Kandy Lady Blessington Lady Marian late Lismore Castle lived London looked Lord Lord Overstone Lord Palmerston Lord Vivian Madame married miles Minister Monsieur morning mother native Nepaul never night occasion once opinion Oxford palace palkee Paris party Paxton political present pretty Prince Princess Princesse de Ligne Rajah received remarkable residence round Russia sent society soon steamer talk Talleyrand temple thought told took town Trincomalee wife women wrote young
Populære avsnitt
Side 309 - The Earl of Chatham, with his sword drawn Stood waiting for Sir Richard Strachan ; Sir Richard, longing to be at 'em, Stood waiting for the Earl of Chatham.
Side 105 - Small is the worth Of beauty from the light retired : Bid her come forth, Suffer herself to be desired, And not blush so to be admired. Then die ! that she The common fate of all things rare May read in thee, — How small a part of time they share That are so wondrous sweet and fair.
Side 143 - SHE walks in beauty, like the night Of cloudless climes and starry skies ; And all that's best of dark and bright Meet in her aspect and her eyes : Thus mellow'd to that tender light Which heaven to gaudy day denies.
Side 314 - There is an old saying that if you take care of the pence, the pounds will take care of themselves.
Side 37 - ... advantage of having been born a Whig. His uncle, the sixth Duke of Devonshire, a benevolent magnifico if ever there was one, treated him like a son, giving him the run of Devonshire House and Chiswick ; while Lady Holland, the most imperious of social dames, let him make a second home of Holland House. " I dined with her whenever I liked. I had only to send word in the morning that I would do so. Of course, I never uttered a word at dinner, but listened with delight to the brilliant talk —...
Side 48 - Venables, JG Phillimore, and EV Kenealy. This proved to be the last stage in his progress towards the Woolsack. Lord Granville died at the beginning of 1846, and the change which this event produced in Frederick Leveson's position can best be described in his own quaint words — " My father was greatly beloved by us all, and was the most indulgent parent — possibly too indulgent. Himself a younger son, although I cannot say that his own case was a hard one, he sympathized with me for being one...
Side 100 - Byng," who carried down to 1871 the social conditions of the eighteenth century, declared that nothing could be duller than Devonshire House in his youth. " It was a great honour to go there, but I was bored to death. The Duchess was usually stitching in one corner of the room, and Charles Fox snoring in another.
Side 108 - ... wonder that Lady Chesterfield admitted into her house that good-for-nothing fellow, Count d'Orsay. He was handsome, clever and amusing, and I am aware that in the eyes of some people such qualities cover a multitude of sins. But his record was a bad one. No Frenchman would speak to him because he...
Side 237 - ... gradual decline of patronage in such places as Derby, where the Duke of Devonshire seems to have decided at the end of the forties to make no effort to keep up his interest. Thus in 1846 he wrote to his nominee, Frederick Leveson-Gower : 'I am so very happy that you are pleased [to become member], and your letter has gratified me very much. It is quite true that you are the only person to whom I should consent to prolong that sort of interest with Derby.