| William Coxe - 1807 - 804 páginas
...15. honourable a peace, when his situation is thus described by an eyewitness and competent judge. " Every thing in this court is running into the last...by the more public calamities of repeated defeats, defencelessncss, poverty, and plague*.'" In a word, the deplorable state in which Charles left, on... | |
| Mrs. Jameson (Anna) - 1831 - 382 páginas
...situation of the court of Vienna at this period, is thus described by the English minister, Robinson. " Every thing in this court is running into the last...signs of folly and madness as ever were inflicted on a people whom Heaven is determined to destroy —no less by domestic divisions than by the more... | |
| William Coxe - 1847 - 616 páginas
...dishonourable a peace, when his situation is thus described by an eye-witness and competent judge. " Everything in this court is running into the last confusion and...by the more public calamities of repeated defeats, defencelessness, poverty, and plague." In a word, the deplorable state in which Charles left, on his... | |
| John Stilwell Jenkins - 1852 - 562 páginas
...and his enemies made encroachments on every side. The English ambassador wrote home that "everything in this court is running into the last confusion and...signs of folly and madness as ever were inflicted on a people whom Heaven is determined to destroy, no less by domestic divisions than by the more public... | |
| Mary Elizabeth Hewitt - 1852 - 372 páginas
...court of Vienna at this period is thus described by the English minister, Robinson : — " Everything in this court is running into the last confusion and...signs of folly and madness as ever were inflicted on a people whom Heaven is determined to destroy, no less by domestic divisions than by the more public... | |
| Edwin Lawrence Godkin - 1853 - 398 páginas
...from them some idea may be formed of the perils by which the young queen was surrounded. " Everything in this court is running into the last confusion and...signs of folly and madness as ever were inflicted on a people whom Heaven is determined to destroy no less by domestic divisions than by the more public... | |
| William Russell - 1857 - 328 páginas
...Everything," wrote the English ambassador, " everything at this court is running into the direst ruin. There are as visible signs of folly and madness as ever were inflicted upon a people whom Heaven was determined to destroy, even less by domestic divisions than by the more public calamities of repeated... | |
| William Coxe - 1882 - 618 páginas
...emperor's affairs, he dreaded the continuance of so unfortunate and ruinous a contest. " Everything in this court is running into the last confusion and...by the more public calamities of repeated defeats, defencelessness, poverty, and plague." But although the signature and execution of the preliminaries... | |
| William Coxe - 1889 - 616 páginas
...dishonourable a peace, when his situation is thus described by an eye-witness and competent judge. " Everything in this court is running into the last confusion and...by the more public calamities of repeated defeats, defencelessness, poverty, and plague." In a word, the deplorable state in which Charles left, on his... | |
| Mrs. Jameson (Anna) - 1910 - 284 páginas
...situation of the court of Vienna at this period is thus described by the English minister, Robinson : — " Every thing in this court is running into the last...signs of folly and madness as ever were inflicted on a people whom Heaven is determined to destroy, no less by domestic divisions than by the more public... | |
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