| 1819 - 480 sider
...other ceremonies to go through in presentations to the queen, and visits to and from ministers and ambassadors, which will take up much time, and interrupt...that I have at heart, the objects of my instructions. I bus ii is tint the essence of things is lost in ceremony in every country of Europe; we must submit... | |
| Robert Huish - 1821 - 746 sider
...other ceremonies to go through in presentations to the queen, and visits to and from ministers and ambassadors, which will take up much time, and interrupt...essence of things is lost in ceremony in every country in Europe ; we must submit to what we cannot alter — patience is the only remedy. With great and... | |
| John Sanderson - 1827 - 362 sider
...other ceremonies to 'go through in presentations to the queen, and visits to and from ministers and ambassadors, which will take up much time, and interrupt...country of Europe ; we must submit to what we cannot alter. Patience is the only remedy." Notwithstanding the courtesy of his reception, Mr. Adams found... | |
| John Sanderson - 1828 - 728 sider
...other ceremonies to go through, in presentations to the queen, and visits to and from ministers and ambassadors, which will take up much time, and interrupt me in my endeavours to obtain all that 1 have at heart, the objects of my instructions. Thus it is that the essence of things is lost in ceremony... | |
| United States. Department of State - 1833 - 544 sider
...There are a train of other ceremonies to go through. The Queen, and visits to and from Ministers and Ambassadors, which will take up much time and interrupt me in my endeavors to obtain what I have at heart, the object of my instructions. It is thus the essence of... | |
| Madame Calderón de la Barca (Frances Erskine Inglis) - 1834 - 280 sider
...train of other ceremonies to go through, the audience of the Queen and visits to and from ministers and ambassadors, which will take up much time and interrupt me in my endeavors to obtain what I have at heart, the object of my instructions. It is thus the essence of... | |
| United States. Department of State - 1837 - 882 sider
...There are a train of other ceremonies to go through. The Queen, and visits to and from Ministers and Ambassadors, which will take up much time, and interrupt me in my endeavors to obtain what I have at heart — the object of my instructions. It is thus the essence... | |
| 1852 - 670 sider
...other ceremonies to go through in presentations to the queen, and visits to and from ministers and am-bassadors, which will take up much time, and interrupt me in my endeavors to obtain all that I have at heart, the objects of my instructions. Thus it ii that the essence... | |
| 1847 - 666 sider
...other ceremonies to go through in presentatious to the queen, and visits to and from ministers and ambassadors, which will take up much time, and interrupt me in my endeavors to obtain all that I have at heart, the objects of my iustructious. Thus it is that the essence... | |
| John Adams, Charles Francis Adams - 1853 - 736 sider
...and from ministers and ambassadors, which will take up much time, and interrupt me in my endeavors to obtain all that I have at heart, — the objects of my instructions. It is thus the essence of things is lost in ceremony in every country of Europe. We must snbmit to... | |
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