| Padre amaro - 1826 - 486 pages
...confuse dates and facts which throw a reciprocal light upon each other. It would be disingenuous, indeed, not to admit that the entry of the French army into...can hardly be supposed that the government did not sympathize,, on that occasion, with the feelings of the people. •But I deny that, questionable, or... | |
| George Canning - 1826 - 138 pages
...confuse dates and facts which throw a reciprocal light upon each other. It would be disingenuous, indeed, not to admit that the entry of the French army into Spain, was in a certain sense, a disparagement—an affront to the pride,—a blow to the feelings of England:—and it can hardly be... | |
| History - 1827 - 966 pages
...excited the jealousies and alarmed the imaginations of our ancestors. "It would be disingenuous, indeed, not to admit that the entry of the French army into...can hardly be supposed that the government did not sympathize, on that occasion, with the feelings of the people. But I deny, that, questionable or censurable... | |
| History - 1827 - 984 pages
...the jealousies and alarmed the imaginations of our ancestors. " It would be disingenuous, indeed,, not to admit that the entry of the French army into...can hardly be supposed that the government did not sympathize, on that occasion, with the feelings of the people. But I deny, that, questionable or censurable... | |
| History - 1827 - 932 pages
...Anne, animated the debates and dictated the votes of the Britisli it would be disingenuous, indeed, not to admit that the entry of the French army into...can hardly be supposed that the government did not sympathize, on that occasion, with the feelings of the people. But I deny, that, questionable or censurable... | |
| Great Britain - 1828 - 526 pages
...excited the jealousies and alarmed the imaginations of our ancestors. It would be disingenuous, indeed, not to admit that the entry of the French army into...that occasion, with the feelings of the people. But I deny that, questionable or censurable as the act might be, it was one which necessarily called for... | |
| 1828 - 498 pages
...excited the jealousies and alarmed the imaginations of our ancestors. It would be disingenuous, indeed, not to admit that the entry of the French army into...that occasion, with the feelings of the people. But I deny that, questionable or censurable as the act might be, it was one which necessarily called for... | |
| George Canning - Great Britain - 1828 - 458 pages
...confuse dates and facts which throw a reciprocal light upon each other. It would be disingenuous, indeed, not to admit that the entry of the French army into...can hardly be supposed that the Government did not sympathize, on that occasion, with the feelings of the people. But I deny that, questionable or censurable... | |
| 334 pages
...excited the jealousies and alarmed the imaginations of our ancestors. — It would be disingenuous indeed not to admit that the entry of the French army into...can hardly be supposed that the government did not sympathize on that occasion with the feelings of the people. But I deny that, questionable or censurable... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament - Great Britain - 1827 - 700 pages
...confuse dates and facts which throw a reciprocal light upon each other. It would be disingenuous, indeed, not to admit that the entry of the French army into...can hardly be supposed that the government did not sympathize, on that occasion, with the feelings of the people. But I deny that, questionable or censurable... | |
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