The Pastor's Fire-side: A Novel, Volume 3Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1817 |
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Page 269
... Stanhope , the British Ambas- sador in Spain . Ripperda saw the ad- vantage of this suggestion ; and the car- riage was turned towards the residence of this gentleman , which was a mile out of the city , on the road to St. Ildefonso ...
... Stanhope , the British Ambas- sador in Spain . Ripperda saw the ad- vantage of this suggestion ; and the car- riage was turned towards the residence of this gentleman , which was a mile out of the city , on the road to St. Ildefonso ...
Page 270
... Stanhope arrived a few hours after the departure of the English Duke , ( whose name had not been mentioned in the house ; ) and was not less surprised than perplexed at finding who had claim- ed his sanctuary . The hurts of Ripperda ...
... Stanhope arrived a few hours after the departure of the English Duke , ( whose name had not been mentioned in the house ; ) and was not less surprised than perplexed at finding who had claim- ed his sanctuary . The hurts of Ripperda ...
Page 271
... Stanhope entered to him , he found his guest lying on a sofa , in a high state of fever , both from his wounds and agi- tation . Ripperda rose at his appearance , and in the name of honour , and the pri- vileges of his station , claimed ...
... Stanhope entered to him , he found his guest lying on a sofa , in a high state of fever , both from his wounds and agi- tation . Ripperda rose at his appearance , and in the name of honour , and the pri- vileges of his station , claimed ...
Page 276
... Stanhope afterwards learnt , that while the new ministers affected great indignation at what they represented as Ripperda's clandestine intelligence with the emissaries of James Stuart , they were severally giving private audiences to ...
... Stanhope afterwards learnt , that while the new ministers affected great indignation at what they represented as Ripperda's clandestine intelligence with the emissaries of James Stuart , they were severally giving private audiences to ...
Page 279
... Stanhope , having no other covering than his dressing gown , took the letter , and retired in angry haste , to read it and hurry on his cloaths . Its contents were to this effect ; and they were addressed to him . ན " That His Majesty ...
... Stanhope , having no other covering than his dressing gown , took the letter , and retired in angry haste , to read it and hurry on his cloaths . Its contents were to this effect ; and they were addressed to him . ན " That His Majesty ...
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Common terms and phrases
Alcaid Ambassador amongst answer Arch-duchess bassador Bavaria betrayed bosom breast Carinthia carriage CHAP countenance Countess Altheim d'Ettrees dare daughter demand dispatches Don Carlos door drew Duke de Ripperda Duke of Wharton Duke Wharton Duke's dungeon Electress Elizabeth Emperor Empress enemies English Duke entered exclaimed eyes father favourite felt Genoa Giovenozzo Grimaldo hand hastily heard heart heaven honour hour insult King knew letter Lindisfarne lips looked Lorenzo Louis's Madrid Majesty Marcella Marchioness Maria Theresa Marquis de Montemar Martini master ment mind minister mother never night noble Orendayn Otteline packet passed passion perda person pistol present Prince Princess prison Queen replied Louis revenge Routemberg Santa Cruz Segovia servant shew shirt of Nessus silence Sinzendorff smile soul Spain Spanish specting spoke Stanhope stood sword thought tion told turned utter Uzeda Vienna voice warden Whar woman words young
Popular passages
Page 14 - Yet mark'd I where the bolt of Cupid fell: It fell upon a little western flower, Before milk-white, now purple with love's wound, And maidens call it Love-in-idleness.
Page 366 - Father, who wouldest not the death of a sinner but rather that he should turn from his wickedness and live...