The Quarterly Review, Volumen16John Murray, 1817 |
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Página 211
... direct conversations with Napoleon and his suite . The fact is , the surgeon is wholly ignorant of that language ; and of this we find positive proof in his own book . In the first place , no man who understood French could have written ...
... direct conversations with Napoleon and his suite . The fact is , the surgeon is wholly ignorant of that language ; and of this we find positive proof in his own book . In the first place , no man who understood French could have written ...
Página 212
... direct and palpable falsehood . Buonaparte is represented as inquiring after the health of Madame de Montholon , and attributing her illness to her horror of the idea of St. Helena - Mr . Warden says he repeated to his doctor the ...
... direct and palpable falsehood . Buonaparte is represented as inquiring after the health of Madame de Montholon , and attributing her illness to her horror of the idea of St. Helena - Mr . Warden says he repeated to his doctor the ...
Página 216
across the Atlantic in them . Sixteen midshipmen engaged most willingly to direct their course ; and , during the night , it was thought they might effect the meditated escape . - We met , " continued Las Cases , in a small room , to ...
across the Atlantic in them . Sixteen midshipmen engaged most willingly to direct their course ; and , during the night , it was thought they might effect the meditated escape . - We met , " continued Las Cases , in a small room , to ...
Página 221
... direct and overwhelming terror of immediate death upon the mind of the surgeon . And , finally , he avows and boasts , that - for the purpose of defeating the very plot in which Captain Wright was implicated - he seized a prince , no ...
... direct and overwhelming terror of immediate death upon the mind of the surgeon . And , finally , he avows and boasts , that - for the purpose of defeating the very plot in which Captain Wright was implicated - he seized a prince , no ...
Página 227
... direct opposition to the truth . The second imputes the evil to a cause in itself inevitable , and which has only incidentally and par- tially operated in producing it . The third recommends a remedy which could no more mitigate the ...
... direct opposition to the truth . The second imputes the evil to a cause in itself inevitable , and which has only incidentally and par- tially operated in producing it . The third recommends a remedy which could no more mitigate the ...
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ancient Anne Plumptre appears Arabs Brazil Buonaparte Buonaparte's called camels Captain cause character Childe Harold circumstances civil coast Desert discovery effect Emperor England English existence favour feeling feet France French Friendly Banks Fur Trade garden give hands honour Hudson Lowe Hudson's Bay Hudson's Bay Company human hundred Indians inhabitants interest island king Koster labour land latitude leagues Legh letter Lord Byron Lord Selkirk Mamelukes mankind manner means ment mind Miss Plumptre Mogadore moral natives nature never North-west Company Nubia object observed opinion Parish passage Pernambuco persons poem poet political poor possession present principle racter readers received Recife remarkable Riley river savage saved says seems shew ship Sidi Hamet society Spencean Philanthropists spirit Strait Sumner supposed surprize Temple thing thought tion Tombuctoo travellers truth voyage whole