| William Belsham - Great Britain - 1795 - 632 pages
...heart, to participate in their sufferings, to praise and reward them for their fortitude. . It was the best of messages, to the best of people, from the BEST of KINGS." The ceconomical abolitions and retrenchments of the Reform Bill met with a violent opposition in the... | |
| 1827 - 790 pages
...his taste for extremes, iu that burst of optimism with which he described the king's message, as " the best of messages to the best of people from the best of kings. " But these first «ffects of the atmosphere of a court, upon heads unaccustomed to it, are natural and harmless... | |
| William Belsham - 1805 - 470 pages
...own heart, to participate in their sufferings, to praise and reward them for their fortitude. It was the best of messages, to the best of people, from the BEST of KINGS." The economical abolitions and retrenchments of the Reform Bill met with a violent opposition in the... | |
| Edmund Burke - Great Britain - 1816 - 532 pages
...own heart ; to participate in their sufferings; to praise and reward them for their fortitude. It was the best of messages to the best of people from the best of kings. This was the true style in which a British king should speak to a British people; for by such language... | |
| Thomas Moore - 1825 - 564 pages
...his taste for extremes, in that burst of optimism with which he described the King's message, as " the best of messages to the best of people from the best of kings." But these first effects of the atmosphere of a court, upon heads unaccustomed to it, are natural and harmless,... | |
| Thomas Moore - 1825 - 462 pages
...his taste for extremes, in that burst of optimism with which he described the King's message, as " the best of messages to the best of people from the best of kings." But these first effects of the atmosphere of a court, upon heads unaccustomed to it, are natural and harmless—while... | |
| Thomas Moore - Dramatists, English - 1826 - 570 pages
...his taste for extremes, in that burst of optimism with which he described the King's message, as " the best of messages to the best of people from the best of kings." But these first effects of the atmosphere of a court, upon heads unaccustomed to it, are natural and harmless... | |
| Great Britain - Boundaries - 1829 - 494 pages
...Sovereign was able to participate in their sufferings, to praise and reward their fortitude. It was the best of messages, to the best of people, from the best of Kings. Mr. Powys in the name of the country gentlemen, declared his warm exultation in the message, and in... | |
| Englishmen - 1836 - 510 pages
...taste for extremes, in that burst of optimism with which he described i Cralr the king's message, as ' the best of messages to the best of people from the best of kings.' But these first effects of the atmosphere of a court, upon heads unaccustomed to it, are natural and harmless... | |
| John Adolphus - Great Britain - 1841 - 638 pages
...sovereign was able to participate in their sufferings, to praise and reward their fortitude. It was the best of messages, to the best of people, from the best of Kings. Mr. Powys, in the name of the country gentlemen, declared his warm exultation in the message, and,... | |
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