A Portion of the Journal Kept by Thomas Raikes, Esq., from 1831 to 1847, Volume 3

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Longman, Brown, Green and Longmans, 1857 - London (England)
 

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Page 179 - La société, telle qu'elle est aujourd'hui , n'existera pas : à mesure que l'instruction descend dans les classes inférieures , celles-ci découvrent la plaie secrète qui ronge l'ordre social depuis le commencement du monde ; plaie qui est la cause de tous les malaises et de toutes les agitations populaires. La trop grande inégalité des conditions et des fortunes a pu se supporter tant qu'elle a été cachée d'un côté par l'ignorance , de l'autre par l'organisation factice de la cité ;...
Page 89 - Upon which Bligh, who was sitting opposite to him, calmly produced two loaded pistols from his coat pocket, which he placed on the table, and said, " Mr. Brummell, if you are really desirous to put a period to your existence, I am extremely happy to offer you...
Page 149 - It was the fashion in those days to drink very hard, and Mrs. Fitzherbert never retired to rest till her Royal spouse came home. But I have heard the late Duke of York say, that often when she heard the Prince and his drunken companions on the staircase, she would seek a refuge from their presence even under the sofa, when the Prince, finding the...
Page 57 - never had any friends : he selected his confidants from his minions. MacMahon was an Irishman of obsequious manners ; he was a little man, his face red, covered with pimples, always dressed in the blue and buff uniform, with his hat on one side, copying the air of his master, to whom he was a prodigious foil, and ready to execute any commissions, which in those days were somewhat complicated.
Page 13 - October, 1846. served; but during the second course a note was brought to the lady of the house, with excuses from the Baron, who was unexpectedly prevented from coming by the sudden death of his aunt, the Duchess von Epzom...
Page 149 - Mrs. Fitzherbert never retired to rest till her Royal spouse came home. But I have heard the late Duke of York say, that often when she heard the Prince and his drunken companions on the staircase, she would seek a refuge from their presence even under the sofa, when the Prince, finding the drawing-room deserted, would draw his sword in joke, and, searching about the room, would at last draw forth the trembling victim from her place of concealment.
Page 265 - ... eyes, peering through his shaggy eyebrows ; his unearthly face, marked with deep stains, covered partly by his shock of extraordinary hair, partly by his enormous muslin cravat, which supports a large protruding lip, drawn over his upper lip, with a cynical expression no painting could render. Add to this apparatus of terror his dead silence, broken occasionally by the most sepulchral guttural monosyllables.
Page 257 - He sat on the side of his bed for the last forty-eight hours, leaning forwards, and supported by two servants, who were relieved every two hours. In this attitude he was attended to the last by his family and various friends, while the numerous servants in his hotel gathered in the adjacent room. It was in miniature the scene of the death of the old kings of France. He died in public. The library adjoining the prince's bedroom, and from which it was only separated by a portiere, or curtain, was constantly...
Page 86 - ' that wishing to feel easy as to his own property, -which he had inherited from a long train of ancestors, but knowing the various claims which his lordship possessed upon that of others, he begged leave to inquire what sum he would be contented to receive as an indemnity for any claim he might hereafter think fit to make upon the Holkham Estate.
Page 45 - ... urged by the duke, who at last good-humouredly said to him : — ' My dear Croker, I can yield to your superior information on most points, and you may perhaps know a great deal more of what passed at Waterloo than myself, but as a sportsman I will maintain my point about the percussion-caps.

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