John Thadeus Delane, Editor of "The Times": His Life and Correspondence, Volume 1C. Scribner's sons, 1908 - Great Britain |
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Page 6
... wrote more than one handbook and became a recognised authority . When not attending to his profession in London he lived at Old Bracknell Lodge , Easthampstead , and there , or at another house at the entrance to the picturesque village ...
... wrote more than one handbook and became a recognised authority . When not attending to his profession in London he lived at Old Bracknell Lodge , Easthampstead , and there , or at another house at the entrance to the picturesque village ...
Page 20
... wrote articles for the great paper with which he was soon to be so closely identified . The last letter of his undergraduate days which we shall quote was written from his uncle's house in Lincolnshire to Dasent , who was spending the ...
... wrote articles for the great paper with which he was soon to be so closely identified . The last letter of his undergraduate days which we shall quote was written from his uncle's house in Lincolnshire to Dasent , who was spending the ...
Page 25
... wrote to Delane have been preserved , but beyond evincing a somewhat unreasonable distrust and dislike of Lord Melbourne , and counselling a general support of Lord Aberdeen in opposition , they are not very illuminating . In 1840 ...
... wrote to Delane have been preserved , but beyond evincing a somewhat unreasonable distrust and dislike of Lord Melbourne , and counselling a general support of Lord Aberdeen in opposition , they are not very illuminating . In 1840 ...
Page 28
... wrote a vile hand , which , like Tom Mozley's , was the despair of printers , Delane used to say that he felt amply compensated for the trouble he had in deciphering his letters by the pungent wit and admirable descriptive power which ...
... wrote a vile hand , which , like Tom Mozley's , was the despair of printers , Delane used to say that he felt amply compensated for the trouble he had in deciphering his letters by the pungent wit and admirable descriptive power which ...
Page 39
... wrote the best metrical description of London since It was filled up in consequence of a cholera scare a few years later . ' Originally the parsonage of Trinity Chapel , and , according to Carlyle , the Mecca of the best literary ...
... wrote the best metrical description of London since It was filled up in consequence of a cholera scare a few years later . ' Originally the parsonage of Trinity Chapel , and , according to Carlyle , the Mecca of the best literary ...
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Common terms and phrases
appointment army Ascot Austria believe Bill Cabinet Charles Greville Cobden Constantinople correspondent course Crimea DASENT MY DEAR DEAR G DEAR GEORGE Delane MY DEAR DELANE TO G. W. Delane's diary dined Disraeli Dublin Duke editor Emperor England English favour fleet foreign France French G. W. DASENT Gladstone Government hear hope House of Commons India interest Ireland J. T. DELANE John Delane John Thadeus Delane John Walter Lady land Laurence Oliphant letter London Lord Aberdeen Lord Clarendon Lord Derby Lord John Russell Lord Palmerston Louis Napoleon ment month morning never night October opinion paper Paris Parliament party peace Peel Peelites political Prime Minister Printing House Square received Reeve Russia Sebastopol sent September ship Sir James Graham Sunday tell to-day to-morrow town troops vote weather week Whig whole write wrote yesterday
Popular passages
Page 103 - I say, that if the French people had thought that a knot of foreign conspirators were caballing against one of their ministers, and caballing for no other reason than that he had upheld, as he conceived, the dignity and interests of his own country, and if they had thought that such a knot of foreign conspirators had coadjutors in their own land, why, I say that the French people, that brave, noble, and spirited nation, would have scorned the intrigues of such a cabal, and would have clung the closer...
Page 274 - ... showing unmistakeable symptoms of its own doubts whether the Government is any longer worth supporting, and Delane told me yesterday he thought they •would not remain long in office, and that it is lime they should go, and he ridiculed the idea of its not being practicable to form another Government.
Page 200 - reached them, they uttered, if so one may speak, the very soul of a nation enraptured with the hard-won victory, and abounding in gratitude to its distant army, yet disclosing the care, the grief, which sobered its joy and its pride. And again, when a few days later, the further accounts from our army showed the darkening of the prospect before it, the great journal using its leadership, and moving out to the front with opportune, resolute counsels, seemed clothed with a power to speak, nay, almost...
Page 200 - ... of reinforcements must be achieved with an exertion of will strong enough to overthrow every obstacle interposed by mere customs and forms.
Page 84 - ... is a tendency — we know such arrangements exist — for this to be done through informal arrangements; that is Presidents sometimes find individuals to whom they assign, in fact, these functions, if not in name. I do not know whether that is better or worse, and perhaps that is better, too. But I am inclined to think that it would be a good thing if this were more highly formalized. Mr. PENDLETON. Certainly it is worth looking into very carefully. My last point is this : You indicated the need...
Page 201 - TERRIBLE i85 occupation is gone ; there is nothing to record more of the British Expedition except its weakness and its misery — misery in every form and shape except that of defeat ; and from that we are solely spared by the goodness of Heaven, which erects barriers of mud and snow between us and our enemies.
Page 162 - Delane was sent for by Lord Aberdeen the night before last, when they had a long conversation on the state of affairs, and Aberdeen told him that he was resolved to be no party to a war with Russia on such grounds as the present, and he was prepared to resign rather than incur such responsibility.
Page 325 - But if the canal could be made, it would open to the French in the event of war a short cut to India, while we should be obliged to go round the Cape. The first thing the French would do would be to send a force from Toulon or Algeria to seize the canal. An expedition, naval and military, would steam away through the canal to India, sweep our commerce, take our colonies, and perhaps seize and materially injure some of our Indian seaports, long before our reinforcements, naval and military, could...
Page 323 - British waterway that it would be traversed by British ships devoted to British traffic and maintained by British tolls. To his mind England as a nation was justified in looking out for the best and cheapest highway to the East. ' If the Suez Canal ever becomes a reality,' he asserted, ' it will be for our benefit, and not for our disadvantage.
Page 102 - Why, Sir, it is a calumny on the French nation to suppose that the personal hatred of any foreigner to their Minister could have this effect. They are a brave, a generous, and a noble-minded people; and if they had thought that a foreign conspiracy had been formed against one of...