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" Let us not fear to disclose here the whole extent of our evils, in order the better to appreciate the whole extent of our resources. A system of defamation, organized on a great scale, and directed with unequalled perseverance, reaches, either near at... "
The French revolution of 1830 - Page 28
by David Turnbull - 1830
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The Quarterly Review, Volume 48

William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - English literature - 1832 - 610 pages
...with their insults and outrages, the members whose votes appeared to them doubtful or suspected.' ' Let us not fear to disclose here the whole extent...government. None of your subjects, Sire, is secure from an insult, if he receives from his sovereign the least mark of confidence or satisfaction. A vast net...
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Monthly Review; Or New Literary Journal

1830 - 644 pages
...peace, to dissolve the bonds of society, and evidently to make the ground tremble under our feet. Let M not fear to disclose here the whole extent of our...Government. None of your subjects, Sire, is secure from an inault, if he receives from his sovereign the least mark of confidence or satisfaction. A vast net...
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Full Annals of the Revolution in France, 1830 ...: Enthronement of the Duke ...

William Hone - France - 1830 - 150 pages
...dissolve the bands of society, and evidently 4o make the ground tremble under our feet. Let us not feat to disclose here the whole extent of our evils, in...government. None of your subjects, Sire, is secure from an insult, if he receives from his sovereign the least mark of confidence or satisfaction. A vast net...
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Cobbett's Political Register, Volumes 69-70

William Cobbett - Great Britain - 1830 - 1046 pages
...dissolve the bonds of society, and evidently to make the pound trejuble under our feet. Let us not (ear to disclose here the whole extent of our evils, in...whole extent of our resources. A system of defamation, organised on a great Kate, and directed with unequalled perseverance, reaches, either near at baud...
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Cobbett's Weekly Register, Volume 70

Great Britain - 1830 - 568 pages
...dissolve the bot,ds of society, and evidently to make the ground tremble under our feet. Let us not tear to disclose here the whole extent of our evils, in...whole extent of our resources. A system of defamation, organised on a great scale, and directed withuheq'talled perseverance, reaches, either near at hand...
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A History of the Revolutions in Europe Since the Downfal of Napoleon ...

A counsellor at law - Belgium - 1831 - 426 pages
...less than to disperse the elements of public peace, to dissolve the bands of society, and evidently to make the ground tremble under our feet. Let us...government. None of your subjects, Sire, is secure from an insult, if he receives from his sovereign the least mark of confidence or satisfaction. A vast net...
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The Annual Register, Or, A View of the History, Politics, and Literature for ...

History - 1831 - 884 pages
...less than to disperse the elements of public peace, to dissolve the bonds of society, and evidently to make the ground tremble under our feet. Let us...government. None of your subjects, Sire, is secure from au insult, if he receives from his sovereign the least mark of confidence or satisfaction. A vast net...
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The Annual Register, Or, A View of the History, Politics, and ..., Volume 72

History - 1831 - 884 pages
...less than to disperse the elements of public peace, to dissolve the bonds of society, and evidently to make the ground tremble under our feet. Let us...government. None of your subjects, Sire, is secure from an insult, if he receives from his sovereign the least mark of confidence or satisfaction. A vast net...
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Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 32

Scotland - 1832 - 1014 pages
...less than to disperse the elements of public peace, to dissolve the bands of society, and evidently to make the ground tremble under our feet. Let us...Government. None of your subjects, Sire, is secure from an insult, if he receives from his Sovereign the least mark of confidence or satisfaction. A vast net...
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England and France; or, A cure for the ministerial Gallomania [by B. Disraeli].

Benjamin Disraeli (earl of Beaconsfield.) - France - 1832 - 452 pages
...less than to disperse the elements of public peace, to dissolve the bands of society, and evidently to make the ground tremble under our feet. Let us...whole extent of our resources. A system of defamation, organised on a great scale, and directed with unequalled perseverance, reaches, either near at hand...
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