A melancholy sorrow sat on every face : Silence, as in the dead of night, reigned through all the chambers of the royal apartment ; the courtiers and ladies, clad in deep mourning, were ranged on each side, and allowed him to pass, without affording him... Memoirs of a Huguenot family. Transl - Página 11por Jacques Fontaine - 1875Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| David Hume - 1775 - 446 páginas
...face : Silence, as in the dead of night, reigned through all the chambers of the royal apartment : The courtiers and ladies, clad in deep mourning, were ranged on each fide, and allowed him to pafs, without affording him one falute or favourable look ; till he was admitted... | |
| David Hume - 1807 - 552 páginas
...face : Silence, as in the dead of night, reigned through all the chambers of the royal apartment ; the courtiers and ladies, clad in deep mourning, were...favourable look; till he was admitted to the queen herself.d That princess received him with a more easy, if not a more gracious countenance ; and heard... | |
| David Hume - 1812 - 550 páginas
...face : Silence, as in the dead of night, reigned through all the chambers of the royal apartment ; the courtiers and ladies, clad in deep mourning, were...favourable look ; till he was admitted to the Queen herself d. That Princess received him with a more easy, if not a more gracious countenance ; and heard his... | |
| 1826 - 674 páginas
...face ; silence, as in the dead of night, reigned through all the chambers of the royal apartment ; the courtiers and ladies, clad in deep mourning, were...and allowed him to pass, without affording him one sálate or favourable look, till he was admitted to the Queen herself." Our readers who are désirons... | |
| David Hume, Tobias Smollett, William Jones - 1828 - 440 páginas
...every face : silence, as in the dead of night, reigned through all the chambers of the royal apartment: the courtiers and ladies, clad in deep mourning, were...favourable look, till he was admitted to the queen herself22. That princess received him with a more easy, if not a more gracious, countenance ; and heard... | |
| William Cuninghame - 1832 - 698 páginas
...tile c/iambers of the royal apartment. The courtiers and ladies, clad in deep mourning, were ranyed on each side, and allowed him to pass without affording...look, till he was admitted to the Queen herself." — Hume's Hist. Ch. XL. A century after the massacre of St. Bartholomew, happened the revolution of... | |
| 1840 - 694 páginas
...mark of the profoundest distress. " Nothing could be more awful and affecting than the solemnity of his audience. A melancholy sorrow sat on every face...pass, without affording him one salute or favourable look."1 Even the subjects of the French king were occasionally affected by this sad event. The Vicomte... | |
| 1844 - 318 páginas
...In England, the French ambassador was greeted in a very different manner. " Nothing," says Hume, " could be more awful and affecting than his audience....favourable look till he was admitted to the queen herself." Nor could the despatches from Sir Francis Walsingham, Queen Elizabeth's envoy at Paris, have served... | |
| 1851 - 620 páginas
...every face : silence, as in the dead of night, reigned through all the chambers of the royal apartment; the courtiers and ladies, clad in deep mourning, were...without affording him one salute or favourable look. On approaching the queen, Lamothe-Fen61on stammered his odious apology, and withdrew confused." The... | |
| David Hume - 1848 - 588 páginas
...face ; silence, as in the dead of night, reigned through all the chambers of the royal apartment ; the courtiers and ladies, clad in deep mourning, were...look ; till he was admitted to the queen herself*. That princess received him with a more easy, if not a more gracious, countenance, and beard his apology... | |
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