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Waldie's select circulating library Volume 16 - Softcover

 
9781231357903: Waldie's select circulating library Volume 16

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Inhaltsangabe

This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1841 Excerpt: ...from him, that, under most circumstances, he could have made that man his friend. This is known to have been absolutely the fact. The Due de Choiseul having more than once supplied, from his own fortune, deficiencies in the revenue, which other ministers might have taken less generous means to fill up. CHAPTER XXI. That splendid monstrosity, the palace of Versailles was certainly not in the same state of magnificence in which it had been placed by the vain ostentation of Louis XIV., but still it displayed a degree of luxury and extravagance which formed a painful contrast with the situation of a suffering and indigent population. There was also, in the aspect of the people who thronged its saloons and galleries, an air of dissolute frivolity, of careless, mocking superciliousness, which generally marks a court or countiy on the eve of its downfall. When the great of a nation have learned to feel a contempt for all those things that are in themselves good and gicat, the nation is soon taught to feel a contempt for the great; and, as a part of the nation, the Count dc Castelneau felt no slight portion of scorn for all that surrounded him, as, accompanied by Ernest de Nogent, he walked through the crowded halls of the palace towards the audience which had been promised him by the Due de Choiseul. He, perhaps, more than any one else, felt and contemned the persons and the scene around him. His eye was fresh from purer things--his mind had been sanctified by a commerce with virtue, truth, and nature--and all the vice, and the idle levity, and the ostentatious nothingness which appeared before his sight, struck him as some thing new and horrible, though he had witnessed the same scene many a time 1 efore. The conversation of Ernest de Nogent had not tended to smo...

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Reseña del editor

This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1841 Excerpt: ...from him, that, under most circumstances, he could have made that man his friend. This is known to have been absolutely the fact. The Due de Choiseul having more than once supplied, from his own fortune, deficiencies in the revenue, which other ministers might have taken less generous means to fill up. CHAPTER XXI. That splendid monstrosity, the palace of Versailles was certainly not in the same state of magnificence in which it had been placed by the vain ostentation of Louis XIV., but still it displayed a degree of luxury and extravagance which formed a painful contrast with the situation of a suffering and indigent population. There was also, in the aspect of the people who thronged its saloons and galleries, an air of dissolute frivolity, of careless, mocking superciliousness, which generally marks a court or countiy on the eve of its downfall. When the great of a nation have learned to feel a contempt for all those things that are in themselves good and gicat, the nation is soon taught to feel a contempt for the great; and, as a part of the nation, the Count dc Castelneau felt no slight portion of scorn for all that surrounded him, as, accompanied by Ernest de Nogent, he walked through the crowded halls of the palace towards the audience which had been promised him by the Due de Choiseul. He, perhaps, more than any one else, felt and contemned the persons and the scene around him. His eye was fresh from purer things--his mind had been sanctified by a commerce with virtue, truth, and nature--and all the vice, and the idle levity, and the ostentatious nothingness which appeared before his sight, struck him as some thing new and horrible, though he had witnessed the same scene many a time 1 efore. The conversation of Ernest de Nogent had not tended to smo...

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  • VerlagRareBooksClub.com
  • Erscheinungsdatum2012
  • ISBN 10 1231357908
  • ISBN 13 9781231357903
  • EinbandTapa blanda
  • SpracheEnglisch
  • Anzahl der Seiten788
  • Kontakt zum HerstellerNicht verfügbar

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Weitere beliebte Ausgaben desselben Titels

9781179704968: Waldie's Select Circulating Library, Volume 16

Vorgestellte Ausgabe

ISBN 10:  1179704967 ISBN 13:  9781179704968
Verlag: Nabu Press, 2011
Softcover