| Robert Hall Baynes - 1879 - 672 頁
...watched the French Emperor narrowly," again wrote Lord Palmerston, who had been his guest at Compiegne, " and have studied his character and conduct. You may...allies, inflicted upon France. He has sufficiently organized his military means ; he is now stealthily but steadily organizing his naval means ; and when... | |
| John Morley - 1881 - 672 頁
...avenging Waterloo had only lain dormant. " You may rely upon it," he said to the Duke of Somerset, " that at the bottom of his heart there rankles a deep...inextinguishable desire to humble and punish England." 1 Later than this, at the beginning of 1860, it is true that he admitted that although the Emperor... | |
| Blanchard Jerrold - 1882 - 706 頁
...foundation ever existed.1 1 In a letter to the Duke of Somerset, in 1860, he wrote : ' I have watched the Emperor narrowly, and have studied his character and...which, since the beginning of this century, England lias, by herself and her allies, inflicted upon France.' — The Life and Correspondence of Vixcount... | |
| Anthony Trollope - 1882 - 238 頁
...England was quite ready for him. And he says in a letter to the Duke of Somerset ; " I have watched the Emperor narrowly, and have studied his character and...inextinguishable desire to humble and punish England." He says to Lord Cowley; "The seizure of Savoy and Nice, and the breach of promise towards Switzerland... | |
| Lewis Appleton - 1889 - 244 頁
...Emperor narrowly and have studied his character and conduct. You may rely upon it that at the bottom there rankles a deep and inextinguishable desire to...naval and military — which since the beginning of thecentury England has by herself and her allies inflicted upon France." And later on, Lord Palmerston... | |
| Herbert Woodfield Paul - 1904 - 462 頁
...Somerset, his First Lord of the Admiralty, he said, " I have watched the French Emperor narrowly, and I have studied his character and conduct. You may rely...beginning of this century, England has, by herself and by her allies, inflicted upon France." i The idea that the Treaty of Commerce made war impossible was... | |
| John Morley - 1906 - 1020 頁
...Waterloo had only lain dormant. •fir. 66. " You may rely upon it," he said to the Duke of Somerset, " that at the bottom of his heart there rankles a deep...inextinguishable desire to humble and punish England." ' Later than this, at the beginning of 1 860, it is true that he admitted that although the Emperor... | |
| William Hunt, Reginald Lane Poole - 1907 - 566 頁
...presses his own private conviction, but has little other evidence to support it. " I have," he says, " watched the French emperor narrowly, and have studied...inextinguishable desire to humble and punish England." l Whether sound or unsound, the people of England fully shared in this belief, of which Sir Charles... | |
| Arthur Samuel Peake, Bernard Bosanquet, Ferruccio Bonavia - 1915 - 604 頁
...had been a supporter of the Emperor, succumbed to the prevailing passion and came to the conclusion that "at the bottom of his heart there rankles a deep...inextinguishable desire to humble and punish England.'!/ On July loth Cobden addressed ^to Palmerston a long letter of remonstrance and argument of which the... | |
| George Peabody Gooch, John Howard Bertram Masterman - 1917 - 130 頁
...resentment, and he had come to believe, not 4n any adequate evidence, that at the bottom of Napoleon's heart " there rankles a deep and inextinguishable desire to humble and punish England.'.' One of the first acts of the new ministry was to ask for A sum of £9,000,000 for the fortifying of... | |
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