| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1901 - 654 pages
...April 5, 1823. MY DEAR LORD, — How is your gout? or rather, how are you? I return the Count D'Orsay's Journal, which is a very extraordinary production,...know, or knew personally, most of the personages and "time a committee was formed in London to aid the Greeks in " their war of independence, and shortly... | |
| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1901 - 658 pages
...April 5, 1823. MY DEAR LORD, — How is your gout? or rather, how are you? I return the Count D'Orsay's Journal, which is a very extraordinary production,...know, or knew personally, most of the personages and 'time a committee was formed in London to aid the Greeks in ' their war of independence, and shortly... | |
| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1904 - 644 pages
...April 5, 1823. MY DEAR LORD, — How is your gout? or rather, how are you? I return the Count D'Orsay's Journal, which is a very extraordinary production,...know, or knew personally, most of the personages and 'time a committee was formed in London to aid the Greeks in ' their war of independence, and shortly... | |
| English periodicals - 1905 - 618 pages
...Journal, and writes: — " The Count's Journal, which is a very extraordinary production, and of u most melancholy truth in all that regards high life...know, or knew personally, most of the personages and societ ies which he descril>es, and after reading his remarks h:»ve the sensation fresh u|x>n me as... | |
| Clare Armstrong Bridgman Jerrold - Dandies - 1910 - 406 pages
...passed in England, which he allowed Byron to see, whose criticism of it to Lord Blessington was that it "is a very extraordinary production, and of a most...sensation fresh upon me as if I had seen them yesterday. The most singular thing is how he should have penetrated, not the fact, but the mystery of the English... | |
| William Teignmouth Shore - 1911 - 368 pages
...: — " MY DEAR LORD, — How is your gout ? or rather how are you ? I return the Count d'Orsay 's journal, which is a very extraordinary production,...behalf of some few exceptions, which I will mention by and bye. The most singular thing is, how he should have penetrated not the facts, but the mystery... | |
| Early English newspapers - 1852 - 692 pages
...gout). Lord Byron returns to him " (he Count's journal, which is a very extraordinary production, aud of a most melancholy truth in all that regards high...personally, most of the personages and societies which be describes ; aud after reading his remaiks have the sensation fresh upon me as if I had seen them... | |
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