 | Thomas Medwin - British - 1824 - 314 pages
...and prepares his citation of it as a new event in the fortunes of nations ; the statesman sees it, and becomes more observant and more on his guard....political history of nations. The great mind of the highly gifted and much lamented Byron observed this phenomenon, and he wished to unite his name with... | |
 | Thomas Medwin - England - 1824 - 496 pages
...it, and prepares his citation of it as a new event in the fortunes of nations; the statesman sees it, and becomes more observant and more on his guard....political history of nations. The great mind of the highly gifted and much lamented Byron observed this phenomenon, and he wished to unite his name with... | |
 | Thomas Medwin - 1824 - 574 pages
...and prepares his citation of it as a new event in the fortunes of nations ; the statesman sees it, and becomes more observant and more on his guard....political history of nations. The great mind of the highly gifted and much lamented Byron observed this phenomenon, and he wished to unite his name with... | |
 | George Clinton - Poets, English - 1825 - 826 pages
...and prepares his citation of it as a new event in the fortunes of nations ; the statesman sees it, and becomes more observant and more on his guard....political history of nations. ' The great mind of the highly. gifted and much-lamented Byron observed this phenomenon, and he wished to unite his name with... | |
 | Edward Blaquière - Greece - 1825 - 610 pages
...and prepares his citation of it as a new event in the fortunes of nations ; the statesman sees it, and becomes more observant and more on his guard....epoch of all nations: for, as I before observed, it t 2 is a phenomenon which stands alone in the political history of nations. " The great mind of the... | |
 | George Clinton - Poets, English - 1828 - 876 pages
...in the fortunes of nations; the statesman sees it, and becomes more observant and more on his goard. Such is the extraordinary time in which we live. My...the highly.gifted and much-lamented Byron observed (his phenomenon, and he wished to unite bis name with our glory. Other revolutions hate happened in... | |
 | John Lee Comstock - Greece - 1828 - 516 pages
...and prepares his citation of it as a new event in the fortunes of nations ; the statesman sees it. and becomes more observant and more on his guard. Such is the extraordinary time in which we lire. My friends, the insurrection of Greece is not an epoch of our nation alone ; it is an epoch of... | |
 | Richard Edgcumbe - Literary Criticism - 1909 - 456 pages
...and prepares his citation of it as a new event in the fortunes of nations ; the statesman sees it, and becomes more observant and more on his guard....political history of nations. 'The great mind of the highly gifted and much lamented Byron observed this phenomenon, and he wished to unite his name with... | |
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