| Victoria (Queen of Great Britain) - Princes - 1867 - 404 pages
...of herself that she now began to share his tastes. In her Journal of the following January she says: "I told Albert that formerly I was too happy to go...though we don't despise or dislike these sometimes.'^ Where is the Englishman, if it be indeed true that England is the land where the happiness and comfort... | |
| Religion - 1867 - 1186 pages
...herself that she now began to share his tastes. In her journal of the following January she says : — ' I told Albert that formerly I was too happy to go...though we don't despise or dislike these sometimes." (pp. 337, 338.) " The Prince himself, though never losing the smallest particle of that intense enjoyment... | |
| Victoria (Queen of Great Britain) - Princes - 1867 - 392 pages
...herself that she now began to share his tastes. In her Journal of the following January she says : " I told Albert that formerly I was too happy to go...though we don't despise or dislike these sometimes.''! Where is the Englishman, if it be indeed true that England is the land where the happiness and comfort... | |
| 1867 - 1012 pages
...how, since the blessed hour of my marriage, and still more since the summer, I dislike and am nnhappy to leave the country, and could be content and happy...though we don't despise or dislike these sometimes." (pp. 337, 338.) " The Prince himself, though never losing the smallest particle of that intense enjoyment... | |
| Charles Grey (hon.) - 1867 - 522 pages
...be " content and happy never to go to town. This " pleased him. The solid pleasures of a peace" ful, quiet, yet merry life in the country, with " my inestimable...though we don't despise or dislike " these sometimes." n Where is the Englishman, if it be indeed » Memorandum by the Queen. true that England is the land... | |
| Charles Grey - Biography - 1867 - 520 pages
..." content and happy never to go to town. This " pleased him. The solid pleasures of a peace " ful, quiet, yet merry life in the country, with " my inestimable...though we don't despise or dislike " these sometimes." 31 Where is the Englishman, if it be indeed *i Memorandum by the Queen. true that England is the land... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - English literature - 1867 - 698 pages
...country, and could be content and happy never to go to town. This pleased him. The solid pleasures of peaceful, quiet, yet merry life in the country, with my inestimable husband and friend, my all-in-all, are far more desirable than the amusements of London, though we don't despise or dislike... | |
| Victoria (Queen of Great Britain) - Princes - 1868 - 410 pages
...herself that she now began to share his tastes. In her Journal of the follow-ing January she says: "I told Albert that formerly I was too happy to go...though we don't despise or dislike these sometimes.'^ Where is the Englishman, if it be indeed true that En-gland is the land where the happiness and comfort... | |
| James Et Al Parton - History - 1868 - 656 pages
...those natural pleasures which are accessible to most of mankind. "I told Albert," wrote the queen once, "that formerly I was too happy to go to London and...though we don't despise or dislike these sometimes." Alas ! that a union productive of so much happiness and so much good should have been prematurely sundered... | |
| James Parton - Suffragists - 1869 - 702 pages
...natural pleasures •which are accessible to most of mankind. " I told Albert," wrote the queen once, " that formerly I was too happy to go to London and...though we don't despise or dislike these sometimes." Alas ! that a union productive of so much happiness and so much good should have been prematurely sundered... | |
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