| William Jardine - 1836 - 392 str.
...of his home ; and he was happy in tw-> children, of whom he used to say, that if he had been allowed to bespeak a pair of children, they should have been those with which Providence had favoured him. Besides his house in town, he still retained his propinquum rus, a retreat every way calculated to... | |
| Jane Williams - 1861 - 580 str.
...whom only two attained maturity, meriting their father's frequent boast " that if he had been allowed to bespeak a pair of children, they should have been those with which Providence had favoured him." The son became a major in the annv, the daughter married General Campbell, of Inverneil. Mrs. Hunter's... | |
| 1873 - 778 str.
...attachment to his family ; and of his children he adds, " He hag often told me that if he had been allowed to bespeak a pair of children they should have been those with which Providence had favoured him." True he was irascible, irritable, and impetuous, and, when irritated, not easily soothed ; but he was... | |
| 1873 - 722 str.
...attachment to his family ; and of his children he adds, " He hag often told me that if he had been allowed to bespeak a pair of children they should have been those with which Providence had favoured him." .. True he was irascible, irritable, and impetuous, and, when irritated, not easily soothed ; but he... | |
| 1908 - 884 str.
...generation of medical men, who seemed to quote him as the schools at one time did Aristotle. . . . His town house was beginning to return all the sums...of morning patients that to find room for them the drawing room sometimes was so suddenly deserted that the French grammar and other implements of instruction... | |
| Stephen Paget - 1897 - 284 str.
...generation of medical men, who seemed to quote him as the schools at one time did Aristotle. . . . His town house was beginning to return all the sums...find room for them the drawing-room sometimes was so suddenly deserted that the French grammar and other implements of instruction were left behind."... | |
| Stephen Paget - 1897 - 308 str.
...support false notions in pathology. He loved his home-life, and often said that if he had been allowed to bespeak a pair of children, they should have been those with which Providence had favoured him. He liked his friends to call him by his Christian name; and the doorplate in Leicester Square bore... | |
| 1897 - 284 str.
...support false notions in pathology. He loved his home-life, and often said that if he had been allowed to bespeak a pair of children, they should have been those with which Providence had favoured him. He liked his friends to call him by his Christian name ; and the doorplate in Leicester Square bore... | |
| 1908 - 796 str.
...generation of medical men, who seemed to quote him as the schools at one time did Aristotle. * * * His town house was beginning to return all the sums...find room for them, the drawing-room sometimes' was so suddenly deserted that the French grammar and other implements of instruction were left behind."... | |
| William Jardine - 1833 - 434 str.
...of his home ; and he was happy in two children, of whom he used to say, that if he had been allowed to bespeak a pair of children, they should have been those with which Providence had favoured him. Besides his house in town, he still retained his propinquum rus, a retreat eveiy way calculated to... | |
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