Memoir of the Life and Correspondence of John, Lord Teignmouth, Volumen1Hatchard, 1843 - 519 páginas |
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Página 13
... give you pleasure . This is the first time , My dear Mother , I was ever widely separated from you ; and I have leisure to perceive the loss that I sustain in your absence - a loss which scarce any consideration can wholly indemnify ...
... give you pleasure . This is the first time , My dear Mother , I was ever widely separated from you ; and I have leisure to perceive the loss that I sustain in your absence - a loss which scarce any consideration can wholly indemnify ...
Página 14
... give you pleasure to find how luckily in this respect I am situated . " We had some very hard gales in the Bay of Biscay , which to a young sailor must necessarily appear very dreadful : they were , in reality , dan- gerous ! I was most ...
... give you pleasure to find how luckily in this respect I am situated . " We had some very hard gales in the Bay of Biscay , which to a young sailor must necessarily appear very dreadful : they were , in reality , dan- gerous ! I was most ...
Página 16
... gives us in the character of Commodore Trunnion , aliàs Hannibal Tough ; and as he frequently per- sonates that hero , so he also has the honour of his name . I am pretty well in his good graces : and I must do his tough ship the ...
... gives us in the character of Commodore Trunnion , aliàs Hannibal Tough ; and as he frequently per- sonates that hero , so he also has the honour of his name . I am pretty well in his good graces : and I must do his tough ship the ...
Página 17
... gives me much satisfaction to find by them that I have hitherto given you no cause to repent of my misconduct . I find also , with plea- sure , my Brother's affectionate Letters . When I was with him , I little knew how I loved him ...
... gives me much satisfaction to find by them that I have hitherto given you no cause to repent of my misconduct . I find also , with plea- sure , my Brother's affectionate Letters . When I was with him , I little knew how I loved him ...
Página 20
... give you pleasure , I am sure , to think I have deserved the friendship of so honest a man . I hope my dear Brother will not fail to write me a long letter to Bengal : the plea- sure I take in hearing cannot at all be equalled but by ...
... give you pleasure , I am sure , to think I have deserved the friendship of so honest a man . I hope my dear Brother will not fail to write me a long letter to Bengal : the plea- sure I take in hearing cannot at all be equalled but by ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Memoir of the Life and Correspondence of John, Lord Teignmouth Charles John Shore Baron Teignmouth Sin vista previa disponible - 2020 |
Términos y frases comunes
66 DEAR SIR 66 MY DEAR abilities Administration adopted affairs affectionate amongst army arrival assistance attention authority British Calcutta character CHARLES GRANT command Company conduct consider controul Court of Directors danger Despatches doubt Dundas duty effect England esteem European event expect favour feel French Government Governor Governor-General happiness Hastings heart HENRY DUNDAS Hindoo honour hope India Lady Shore late Letter Lord Cornwallis Lord Hobart Lord Teignmouth Lord Wellesley Lordship Lucknow Madras Mahratta Empire Mahrattas measures ment mind Nabob Native never Nizam object obliged observes occasion officers opinion Oude Persian pleasure political possess principles Rajah received reflections regard Religion residence respect Revenue Rohillas sentiments Service Settlement shew sincere Sindiah Sir John Shore Sir Robert Abercrombie Sir William Jones situation Snitterton success Tanjore tion Tippoo treaty trust Vizier Ali's Wellesley's whilst wish zeal Zemaun Shah Zemindars
Pasajes populares
Página 271 - Him who died for our sins, and rose again for our justification, and now liveth and reigneth with Thee and the Holy Ghost, one God world without end.
Página 503 - I cannot refrain from adding, that the collection of tracts which we call from their excellence, the Scriptures, contain, independently of a Divine origin, more true sublimity, more exquisite beauty, purer morality, more important history, and finer strains both of poetry and eloquence, than could be collected within the same compass, from all other books that were ever composed in any age or in any nation.
Página 28 - Will you believe that the boys of the service are the sovereigns of the country under the unmeaning title of Supervisors, collectors of the revenue, administrators of justice, and rulers, heavy rulers of the people...
Página 504 - Linnaeus, he discovered system, truth, and science, which never failed to captivate and engage his attention ; and from the proofs which he has exhibited of his progress in Botany, we may conclude that he would have extended the discoveries in that science.
Página 494 - ... improvements. It was to be expected, after his arrival in India, that he would eagerly embrace the opportunity of making...
Página 501 - ... intellectual powers, his wonderful attainments in literature and science, and the facility with which all his compositions were made, — cannot doubt, if it had pleased Providence to protract the date of his existence, that he would have ably executed much of what he had so extensively planned. I have, hitherto, principally confined my discourse to the pursuits of our late President in oriental literature, which, from their extent, might appear to have occupied all his time, but they neither...
Página 136 - In February 1787 Shore wrote to Hastings : " The system of patronage which you so justly reprobated, and which you always found so grievous a tax, has been entirely subverted. The members of Government, relieved from the torture of private solicitations, have more time to attend to their public duties.
Página 482 - Tippoo and of the Nizam. Wherever we spread ourselves, particularly if we aggrandize ourselves at the expense of the Mahrattas, we increase this evil. We throw out of employment, and of means of subsistence, all who have hitherto managed the revenue, commanded or served in the armies, or have plundered the country.
Página 289 - At my durbar yesterday I had proofs of the affection entertained by the natives for Sir William Jones. The Professors of the Hindu Law, who were in the habit of attendance upon him, burst into unrestrained tears when they spoke to me, and grief clouded many countenances.
Página 276 - They compare the past with the present, and the present with the future; and the result suggests little hope or consolation.