| Thomas Medwin - 1824 - 574 pages
...correspondence. He concludes a letter to his banker, in Cephalonia, on business, with this sentence, " I hope things here will go well, some time or other...cause as long as a cause exists, first or second." Lord Bvron had the more merit in the zeal and energy with which he espoused the interests of the Hellenic... | |
| Thomas Medwin - British - 1824 - 314 pages
...correspondence. He concludes a letter to his banker, in Cephalonia, on business, with this sentence, " I hope things here will go well, some time or other...cause as long as a cause exists, first or second." Lord Byron had the more merit in the zeal and energy with which he espoused the interests of the Hellenic... | |
| Thomas Medwin - England - 1824 - 496 pages
...Cephalonia, on business, with this sentence : " I hope things here will go well, some time or other—I will stick by the cause as long as .a cause exists, first or second."" Lord Byron had the more merit in the zeal and energy with which he espoused the interests of the Hellenic... | |
| Edward Blaquière - Greece - 1825 - 610 pages
...Barff, not many days after his landing. " I hope things here will go well some time or other. I o^ will stick by the cause as long as a cause exists,...object of his most ardent solicitude. Finding that the Suliotes, of whom there happened to be a large body in the town, were anxious to acquire a knowledge... | |
| Great Britain - 1825 - 494 pages
...not the Holy Allies, or the holier Mussulmans." In a letter to his banker at Cephalonia, he says, " I hope things here will go well, some time or other...will stick by the cause as long as a cause exists." His playful humour sometimes broke out amidst the deep anxiety he felt for the success of the Greeks.... | |
| George Clinton - Poets, English - 1825 - 826 pages
...correspondence. He concludes a letter to his banker, in Cephulonia, on business, with this sentence : ' I hope things here will go well, some time or other — I will slick by the cause as long as a cause exists, Jirst or second.' of their romance by actual experience... | |
| Thomas Medwin - 1825 - 578 pages
...correspondence. He concludes a letter to his banker, in Cephalonia, on business, with this sentence : " I hope things here will go well, some time or other — I wiil stick by the cause as long as a cause existsti/?r«f or second." Lord Byron had the more merit... | |
| John Lee Comstock - Greece - 1828 - 516 pages
...appropriated to the payment of the fleet, and in obtaining supplies for Missolonghi. From the distress which prevailed at this moment, the above supply was of...second." It had previously been arranged, that Lord Byrou should be allowed to organize a corps, of which the command was to be given to himself. This... | |
| George Clinton - Poets, English - 1828 - 888 pages
...correspondence. He concludes a letter to his banker, in Cephalonia, on business, with this sentence : ' I hope things here will go well, some time or other...cause as long as a cause exists, first or second.' Lord Byron had the more merit in the zeal and energy with which he espoused the interests of the Hellenic... | |
| Thomas Curtis (of Grove house sch, Islington) - 436 pages
...of the supplies, with some pleasantry, and concludes a letter to his banker, in Cephalonia, thus : ' I hope things here will go well, some time or other;...cause as long as a cause exists, first or second.' His lordship had by this time yielded to the solicitations of Mavrocordatos, who repeatedly urged him... | |
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