| England - 1820 - 876 pages
...Parliament were calculated to produce. I mean the loss which the nation has sustained by the death of a Sovereign, with whose person all that is venerable...many a weary and many a stormy pilgrimage; — scarce lessaguide, and quite as much a guardian, in the cloud of his evening darkness as in the brightness... | |
| England - 1820 - 730 pages
...generations of his subjects ; a Sovereign, whose goodness, whose years, whose sorrows and sufferings, roust have softened the hearts of the most ferocious enemies...a weary and many a stormy pilgrimage ; — scarce lessaguide, and quite as much a guardian, in the cloud of his evening darkness as in the brightness... | |
| Early English newspapers - 1820 - 748 pages
...and sufferings must have softened the heart of the most ferocious enemies of kinglypower; — who*e active virtues, and the memory of whose virtues, when...pilgrimage ; — scarce less a guide, and quite as much a guard'an, in the cloud of his evening darkness as in the brightness of his meridian day. " livery effort... | |
| Abraham John Valpy - Great Britain - 1820 - 580 pages
...whose virtues, when it pleased Divine Providence that they should be active no more, have been theguide and guardian of his people through many a weary and...guardian, in the cloud of his evening darkness as in the brightnets of his meridian day. That such a loss, and tRe recollections and reflections naturally arising... | |
| William Cobbett - Great Britain - 1820 - 680 pages
...deuce tbat they should be ac*' five no more, have been the " guide and guardian of his peo" pic (hrough many a weary and "many a stormy pilgrimage; — " scarce less a guide, and quite ai " much a guardian, in the cloud "of his evening darkness as in the '• brightness of his meridian... | |
| Augustus Granville Stapleton - 1859 - 648 pages
...memory of whose virtues when it pleased Divine ' Providence that they should be active no more, had ' been the guide and guardian of his people through ' many a weary and many a stormy pilgrimage,' lived, indeed, when the arch-enemy of his kingdom became a prisoner on board one of his ships of war;... | |
| Augustus Granville Stapleton - Great Britain - 1859 - 664 pages
...memory of whose virtues when it pleased Divine ' Providence that they should be active no more, had ' been the guide and guardian of his people through ' many a weary and many a stormy pilgrimage,' lived, indeed, when the arch-enemy of his kingdom became a prisoner on board one of his ships of war;... | |
| Augustus Granville Stapleton - Great Britain - 1859 - 644 pages
...memory of whose virtues when it pleased Divine ' Providence that they should be active no more, had ' been the guide and guardian of his people through ' many a weary and many a stormy pilgrimage,' lived, indeed, when the arch-enemy of his kingdom became a prisoner on board one of his ships of war;... | |
| 1820 - 990 pages
...Parliament were calculated to produce. I mean the loss which the nation has sustained by the death of a Sovereign, with whose person all that is venerable...a weary and many a stormy pilgrimage ; — scarce lessaguide, and quite as much a guardian, in the cloud of his evening darkness as in the brightness... | |
| Early English newspapers - 1820 - 706 pages
...enemies of kingly power; — whose active virtues, and the luemory of whose virtues, when it pleaied Divine Providence that they should be active no more,...pilgrimage;— scarce less a guide, and quite as much a guard'an, in the cloud of his evening darkness as in the brightness of his meridian day. " Every effort... | |
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