exclaimed he ; ' how could they allow these scoundrels to enter ? They ought to have blown four or five hundred of them into the air with cannon ; the rest would then have taken to their lleiils.'" 1)1. BOUHXIENNE, tip 49.] History of Our Own Times - Strana 283autor/autoři: Thomas Campbell, Thomas Carlyle - 1843Úplné zobrazení - Podrobnosti o knize
| Constable and co, ltd - 1826 - 1196 str.
...Bonaparte's indignation burst forth uncontrolled. " What madness !" exclaimed he alond, and in h is patois, u how could they allow these scoundrels to enter! they ought to have blown four or tive hundred of them into the air with cannon ; the rest would then have taken to their heels." While... | |
| Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne - 1830 - 374 str.
...Bonaparte's indignation burst forth uncontrolled. " What madness !" exclaimed he aloud, and in his patois, " how could they allow these scoundrels to enter ! they...; the rest would then have taken to their heels." While at dinner together — for which, by the way, I paid, as was pretty generally the case, happening... | |
| Walter Scott - 1834 - 430 str.
...his head, Buonaparte could no longer restrain his indignation. ' What madness ! ' exclaimed he ; ' how could they allow these scoundrels to enter ? They...with cannon ; the rest would then have taken to their lleiils.'" 1)1. BOUHXIENNE, tip 49.] " poor and virtuous people," as Robespierre used to call them,... | |
| Walter Scott - 1834 - 430 str.
...his head, Buonaparte could no longer restrain his indignation. ' What madness ! ' exclaimed he ; ' how could they allow these scoundrels to enter ? They...with cannon ; the rest would then have taken to their ' — DE BOUKKIENNE, tip 49.] " poor and virtuous people," as Robespierre used to call them, with an... | |
| Adolphe Thiers - 1838 - 454 str.
...placed on his head, Bonaparte could no longer restrain his indignation. ' What madness!' exclaimed he ; 'how could they allow these scoundrels to enter? They...cannon. The rest would then have taken to their heels.'" — Bourrienne's Memoirs. E. t* r' I alarming manner. The national grenadiers, who had surrounded the... | |
| Marie Joseph L. Adolphe Thiers - 1838 - 448 str.
...on his head, Bonaparte could no longer restrain his indignation. ' What madness !' exclaimed he ; ' how could they allow these scoundrels to enter? They...cannon. The rest would then have taken to their heels.'" — Bourrienne't Memoirs. E. alarming manner. The national grenadiers, who had surrounded the princess,... | |
| George Moir Bussey - 1840 - 664 str.
...exclaimed aloud, with emphatic scorn, " What imbecility, to allow the scoundrels to enter ! They should have blown four or five hundred of them into the air with the cannon, and the rest would have taken to their heels." This ebullition must probably be regarded... | |
| Sir Walter Scott - 1843 - 406 str.
...as his own, he expressed the highest dissatisfaction with the recent events at Paris, claimed he ; ' how could they allow these scoundrels to enter ? They...; the rest would then have taken to their heels.' "-DE BOURRIENNE, torn, i., p. 49. ' " By eight o'clock in the evening they had all departed, and silence... | |
| 1845 - 732 str.
...the miserable sans culotte, he could restrain himself no longer, and exclaimed " What madness ! now could they allow these scoundrels to enter ? They...cannon. The rest would then have taken to their heels." But Louis, who would struggle long and tenaciously with the National Assembly for a mere prerogative,... | |
| 1845 - 688 str.
...the miserable sans culotte, he could restrain himself no longer, and exclaimed " What madness ! now could they allow these scoundrels to enter ? They...cannon. The rest would then have taken to their heels." B<ut Louis, who would struggle long and tenaciously with the National Assembly for a mere prerogative,... | |
| |