More about King EdwardE. Nash, 1913 - 389 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page xi
... Majesty King George affords me a unique opportunity of testifying to the unanimous senti- ments of the French nation towards the son of the glorious Sovereign under whose auspices the fruitful friendship between Great Britain and France ...
... Majesty King George affords me a unique opportunity of testifying to the unanimous senti- ments of the French nation towards the son of the glorious Sovereign under whose auspices the fruitful friendship between Great Britain and France ...
Page xxii
... , British and Australian girls honour the King at Ischl , the King and the Victoria Home for British Governesses at Vienna - Intimate sketch of the King and his dog Peter at Cannes by a friend of His Majesty's host xxii CONTENTS.
... , British and Australian girls honour the King at Ischl , the King and the Victoria Home for British Governesses at Vienna - Intimate sketch of the King and his dog Peter at Cannes by a friend of His Majesty's host xxii CONTENTS.
Page xxii
... , British and Australian girls honour the King at Ischl , the King and the Victoria Home for British Governesses at Vienna - Intimate sketch of the King and his dog Peter at Cannes by a friend of His Majesty's host xxii CONTENTS.
... , British and Australian girls honour the King at Ischl , the King and the Victoria Home for British Governesses at Vienna - Intimate sketch of the King and his dog Peter at Cannes by a friend of His Majesty's host xxii CONTENTS.
Page xxiii
Edward Legge. Peter at Cannes by a friend of His Majesty's host and hostess PAGES 102-124 CHAPTER VI ROYAL CHILDREN'S MONEY - BOXES Debates on the grants to the young Princes and Princesses -Chamberlain , Dilke , Bradlaugh , Labouchere ...
Edward Legge. Peter at Cannes by a friend of His Majesty's host and hostess PAGES 102-124 CHAPTER VI ROYAL CHILDREN'S MONEY - BOXES Debates on the grants to the young Princes and Princesses -Chamberlain , Dilke , Bradlaugh , Labouchere ...
Page xxv
... Majesty's Physicians ( 1910 ) —Leaflet issued by the Parliamentary Anti - Vivisection Society - Queen Alexandra's letter thereon read in the Court of King's Bench ( 1913 ) 221-227 CHAPTER XIII KING EDWARD IN STORY Anecdotes of Edward ...
... Majesty's Physicians ( 1910 ) —Leaflet issued by the Parliamentary Anti - Vivisection Society - Queen Alexandra's letter thereon read in the Court of King's Bench ( 1913 ) 221-227 CHAPTER XIII KING EDWARD IN STORY Anecdotes of Edward ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
admiration Albert Alexandra Day amusing asked attacks Bismarck carriage Castle charming Club Consort Court Crown Daily daughter death devoted student Dictionary of National Dictionary's Memoir dined dinner Duchess Duke Duke of Edinburgh Emperor Empress England English Entente France Frederick French friends gave gentleman German Gladstone Grand guests hand Heir-Apparent honour Imperial Ireland jewels June King George King's knew Lady late King letter London look Lord Knollys Lord Salisbury Lord Zetland Majesty Majesty's Marienbad Marlborough House ment Ministers Miss Monarch mother National Biography never occasion Office Palace Paoli papers Paris Parliament present Press Prince and Princess Prince of Wales Princess of Wales Queen Alexandra Queen Victoria readers reign replied Royal Highness Sandringham Sir Arthur Sir Sidney Lee sister Sovereign story tell Theatre things throne tion told took Tsar Vambéry Vicars Viscount Knollys William Windsor words writer wrote
Popular passages
Page 1 - He is possessed by a commanding spirit, And his, too, is the station of command. And well for us it is so ! There exist Few fit to rule themselves, but few that use Their intellects intelligently. Then Well for the whole, if there be found a man Who makes himself what nature destined him, The pause, the central point, to thousand...
Page 141 - Palmerston out of office last year; that she first hampered him in the Foreign Office, by insisting on seeing his despatches before he sent them off, and then that she compelled John Russell to dismiss him on the ground of disrespectful conduct to herself, when the real reason was condescension to the wishes of Austria, with which Power the Prince had intimately connected himself. Charges of this sort, mixed up with smaller collateral ones, have been repeated day after day with the utmost virulence...
Page 3 - ... capable of removing our social grievances, were we to transfer to it those prerogatives which the Parliament has gradually usurped, and used in a manner which has produced the present material and moral disorganisation.
Page 143 - Derby was put into a great rage by Aberdeen's speech, and could not resist attacking me (whom he saw behind the Throne). He attacked my letter (signed C.), in which I had pitched into the Tories for their attacks on the Prince. I saw his people turn round and look towards me, but I did not care a fig, and was rather pleased to see how what I wrote had galled them, and struck home.
Page 4 - Multitude ; as the power of the Crown has diminished, the privileges of the People have disappeared ; till at length the sceptre has become a pageant, and its subject has degenerated again into a serf.
Page 209 - I bind them proudly on my locks of snow. There shall they bide, till he who follows next, Of whom I cannot even guess the name, Shall by Court favour, or some vain pretext Of fancied merit, desecrate the same,— And think, perchance, he wears them quite as well, As the sole bard who sang of Peter Bell!
Page 140 - Advertiser," but chiefly in the latter, and was immediately taken up by the Tory papers, " The Morning Herald " and " The Standard," and for some time past they have poured forth article after article and letter after letter full of the bitterest abuse and all sorts of lies. " The Morning Advertiser" has sometimes had five or six articles on the same day all attacking and maligning Prince Albert. Many of these are very vague, but the charges against him are principally to this effect ; that he has...
Page 142 - has been full of coarse and stupid invectives against me, supplied by correspondents, who, from the details in their letters, must be persons with whom I live in great social intimacy. They are, however, of a very harmless description, and too dull to be effective. January 25th. — I wrote a letter in the ' Times ' (signed Juvenal), showing up the lies of the ' Morning Advertiser,' and how utterly unworthy of credit such a paper is. I find Palmerston and Aberdeen have come to an understanding as...
Page vi - For first he desired to have the sovereign rule; next he endeavoured to ap: pear worthy of it; then thought it but reasonable, as a man, to enjoy his exalted fortune; and lastly, he turned his thoughts to such actions, as might perpetuate his name, and transmit some image and effect of his government to futurity.