The North American Review, Volume 118James Russell Lowell O. Everett, 1874 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 24
Page 4
... Italian governments . Other nations , again , have through fierce internal commotions , as France , or by fighting a foreign op- pressor , as Switzerland and modern Italy , thrown off the power of aristocracy and the traditions of the ...
... Italian governments . Other nations , again , have through fierce internal commotions , as France , or by fighting a foreign op- pressor , as Switzerland and modern Italy , thrown off the power of aristocracy and the traditions of the ...
Page 157
... Italian statesman that he would refrain from a continuation . The object La Marmora had in publishing these highly im- portant state documents may here be set aside as irrelevant . The documents do not lose in importance from the fact ...
... Italian statesman that he would refrain from a continuation . The object La Marmora had in publishing these highly im- portant state documents may here be set aside as irrelevant . The documents do not lose in importance from the fact ...
Page 158
... Italian governments was drawn up in three articles . Article I. provided that Prussia would exert herself to promote a " German reform " so as to bring about a conflict between Prussia and Austria , in which case Italy , after having ...
... Italian governments was drawn up in three articles . Article I. provided that Prussia would exert herself to promote a " German reform " so as to bring about a conflict between Prussia and Austria , in which case Italy , after having ...
Page 159
... Italian Kingdom would be the prize of an alliance with Prussia in case of success . There are many Italians who aim also at the annexation of Trieste and of the southern part of the Tyrol . General La Marmora , at any rate , did not ...
... Italian Kingdom would be the prize of an alliance with Prussia in case of success . There are many Italians who aim also at the annexation of Trieste and of the southern part of the Tyrol . General La Marmora , at any rate , did not ...
Page 160
... Italians naturally attach , therefore , great importance to its possession . The Germans , who know what use the French could make of that door of ingress in case of a war in which the Italians would be either the willing or the forced ...
... Italians naturally attach , therefore , great importance to its possession . The Germans , who know what use the French could make of that door of ingress in case of a war in which the Italians would be either the willing or the forced ...
Contents
302 | |
326 | |
333 | |
335 | |
365 | |
383 | |
389 | |
398 | |
176 | |
182 | |
185 | |
188 | |
192 | |
194 | |
222 | |
256 | |
399 | |
416 | |
448 | |
451 | |
455 | |
457 | |
460 | |
463 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
American appear Arctic banks bishop Bismarck cabinet government called capital Captain Catholic centuries character Church civil coast coin Colonel Pickering Colonies Congress Constitution court crown currency CXVIII debt Declaration of Independence Empire England English Ephraim Brevard existence fact favor feudal France French German girls give gold governor Govone Greenland hand Holland House hundred idea interest issue Italian Jefferson king Lancaster Sound land latitude Lex Salica Lord Lord Holland means Mecklenburg Mecklenburg County ment Minister Muscovy Company nation nature never North Carolina notes and credits opinion original party passage passed period persons political Pope present Prussia question reader Roman Roman law seignior ships spirit Strait thing Thomas Polk tion Turgéniew United States notes volume voyage whole writes