The Anti-Jacobin, Or, Weekly Examiner, Volume 21799 - Europe |
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Page 16
... Troops are full of grief and indignation , and all " the Officers are come post to London , to declare that they will " resign , if he is not restored , " — L'Ecbo , 29th Pluvoise . " All the symptoms which forerun a Revolution , now ...
... Troops are full of grief and indignation , and all " the Officers are come post to London , to declare that they will " resign , if he is not restored , " — L'Ecbo , 29th Pluvoise . " All the symptoms which forerun a Revolution , now ...
Page 25
... Troops on the Lower Rhine . VIENNA , FEB . 14. - The Vienna Gazette of Satur- day last announced the arrival here of General BERNA- DOTTE , as " destined Ambassador of the French Re- public to this Court . " It is understood , that it ...
... Troops on the Lower Rhine . VIENNA , FEB . 14. - The Vienna Gazette of Satur- day last announced the arrival here of General BERNA- DOTTE , as " destined Ambassador of the French Re- public to this Court . " It is understood , that it ...
Page 26
... Troops forming a part of the Army of the Empire , were under his immediate Com- mand , and that the Court of Munich was on no account responsible for their conduct . With this answer Captain LATOUCHE returned immediately to General ...
... Troops forming a part of the Army of the Empire , were under his immediate Com- mand , and that the Court of Munich was on no account responsible for their conduct . With this answer Captain LATOUCHE returned immediately to General ...
Page 27
... Troops , in a very severe battle on the Mountain of Tenda . The slaughter was very great on both sides ; but the regular Troops remained complete Victors , having made prisoner the Chief of the Insurgents , the Brigadier GIAFFERI , who ...
... Troops , in a very severe battle on the Mountain of Tenda . The slaughter was very great on both sides ; but the regular Troops remained complete Victors , having made prisoner the Chief of the Insurgents , the Brigadier GIAFFERI , who ...
Page 29
... Troops of the Porte . The Town of Sophie , as well as several others which were besieged by his Troops , has been relieved ; and it is hoped that on account of the great force sent against him , he will soon be obliged to yield . The ...
... Troops of the Porte . The Town of Sophie , as well as several others which were besieged by his Troops , has been relieved ; and it is hoped that on account of the great force sent against him , he will soon be obliged to yield . The ...
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ANTI-JACOBIN appears April arms Army arrived assertion attack attempt BALLYNAHINCH Berne BUONAPARTE CAMILLE JORDAN Cantons CASIMERE Cisalpine Cisalpine Republic Citizen conduct considered Constitution Corresponding Society Country Courier declared defence Directory doubt EDITOR Enemy England English Europe Expedition expence Falsehood favour feelings France French Directory French Government French Papers Friends happy honour hope House human insult intelligence Ireland Jacobin KING late Letter Liberty Lord Lord MOIRA March MATILDA means measure ment Minister Morning Chronicle Morning Post Nation never object observed occasion ourselves Paragraph Paris Party patriotic Peace Pere du Chene person Pilnitz Ports present Principles Print Prisoners Public Rastadt Readers received respect Revolution ROGERO Roman Republic Rome sentiments shew spirit Switzerland taken TALLEYRAND thing thou tion Town Treaty TREATY of PAVIA Troops truth United Irishmen Vienna WEEKLY EXAMINER Whig Whig Club wish
Popular passages
Page 526 - No farther seek his merits to disclose, Or draw his frailties from their dread abode (There they alike in trembling hope repose), The bosom of his Father and his God.
Page 626 - If Vice appal thee, — if thou view with awe Insults that brave, and crimes that 'scape the law; — Yet may the specious bastard brood, which claim A spurious homage under Virtue's name, Sprung from that parent of ten thousand crimes, The New Philosophy of modern times, — Yet, these may rouse thee! — With unsparing hand, Oh, lash the vile impostures from the land! First, stern...
Page 428 - Matilda, whether in this dark abode, amidst toads and spiders, or in a royal palace, amidst the more loathsome reptiles of a Court, would be indifferent to me.
Page 329 - The present state of things is so essentially different from that in which instructions were given to the collectors to restrain vessels of the United States from sailing in an armed condition, that the principle on which those orders were issued has ceased to exist.
Page 447 - The meeting between Matilda and Cecilia, for example, in the first act of the "Rovers," and their sudden intimacy, has been censured as unnatural. Be it so. It is taken almost word for word from "Stella," a German (or professedly a German) piece now much in vogue, from which, also, the catastrophe of Mr. Higgins's play is in part borrowed, so far as relates to the agreement to which the ladies come, as the reader will see by and by, to share Casimere between them. The dinner scene is copied partly...
Page 429 - This faded form ! this pallid hue ! ; This blood my veins is clotting in, My years are many — They were few When first I enter'd at the U — — NIVERSITY of Gottingen — — NIVERSITY of Gottingen.
Page 636 - Couriers and Stars, Sedition's Evening Host, Thou Morning Chronicle, and Morning Post, Whether ye make the Rights of Man your theme, Your Country Libel, and your God blaspheme, Or dirt on private worth and virtue throw, Still blasphemous or blackguard, praise Lepaux ! ' And ye five other wandering Bards, that move In sweet accord of harmony and love, C dge and S — th — y, L — d, and L — b and Co. Tune all your mystic harps to praise Lepaux...
Page 430 - There first for thee my passion grew, Sweet! sweet Matilda Pottingen! Thou wast the daughter of my tu — tor, Law Professor at the U — — niversity of Gottingen — — niversity of Gottingen.
Page 419 - ... frequently inculcated by the German Dramas which I have had the good fortune to see ; being no other than 'the reciprocal duties of one or more husbands to one or more wives, and to the children who may happen to arise out of this complicated and endearing connection? The plot, indeed, is formed by the combination of the plots of two of the most popular of these plays (in the same way as Terence was wont to combine two stories of Menander's). The characters are such as the admirers of these plays...
Page 99 - CRIBBAGE mark th' amusing game — The Partners changing, but the SPORT the same. Else would the Gamester's anxious ardour cool, Dull every deal, and stagnant every pool. — Yet must one Man, with one unceasing Wife, Play the LONG RUBBER of connubial life. Yes ! human laws, and laws esteem'd...