| 1823 - 298 strani
...sooner enjoyed than lost : the good matron, who was in the most endearing sense my parent and my friend, was seized with a fever, which, in a few days, put an end to her life, and left me 'alone in the world without alliance or protection, overwhelmed with grief, and... | |
| Lionel Thomas Berguer - 1823 - 636 strani
...sooner enjoyed than lost : the good matron, who was in the most endearing sense my parent and my friend, was seized with a fever, which, in a few days, put an end to her life, and left me alone in the world without alliance or protection, overwhelmed with grief and... | |
| Lorenzo Pignotti - 1826 - 446 strani
...did he disdain to put his own hand to the work, like the meanest of his soldiers. He was taken ill of a fever, which, in a few days, put an end to his life, on the 3rd of September, at the age of fortyseven years. Foreseeing his end approaching, he advised... | |
| Benvenuto Cellini - 1828 - 364 strani
...unwholesome sea air affected the cardinal before any of the rest, so that he was attacked by a malignant fever, which in a few days put an end to his life. He was one of the duke's chief supports, being a person of great abilities, and of consequence his... | |
| Benvenuto Cellini - 1828 - 670 strani
...unwholesome sea air affected the cardinal before any of the rest, so that he was attacked by a malignant fever, which in a few days put an end to his life. He was one of the duke's chief supports, being a person of great abilities, and of consequence his... | |
| Daniel Neal - 1837 - 704 strani
...prison, if he replied in his own defence. British Biography, vol. 4. p. 377.— ED. seized with a violent fever, which in a few days put an end to his life, in the forty-eighth year of his age. He was full of heavenly expressions in his last sickness, and... | |
| Daniel Neal - 1844 - 566 strani
...days. At length, as he" was attending Mrs. Redriche on a visit to Chelsea, he was seized with a violent fever, which in a few days put an end to his life, in the forty-eighth year of his age. He was full of heavenly expressions in his last sickness, and... | |
| Benvenuto Cellini - 1847 - 524 strani
...unwholesome air affected the cardinal before any of the rest, so that he was attacked by a malignant fever, which in a few days put an end to his life.* He was one of the duke's chief supports, and * Cosmo I. having a great inclination, as well as his... | |
| Leopold von Ranke - 1849 - 502 strani
...chief servants of the Elector that it stood ill with him — Count Schwarzenberg — upon hearing tiie cannot take upon ourselves to say that his conscience...that Frederick William was no longer fettered by his connexion with the Emperor, he could venture to make some advances to the Swedes. It was only after... | |
| Leopold von Ranke - 1849 - 504 strani
...chief servants of the Elector that it stood ill with him — Count Schwarzenberg — upon hearing the cannot take upon ourselves to say that his conscience...that Frederick William was no longer fettered by his connexion with the Emperor, he could venture to make some advances to the Swedes. It was only after... | |
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