| Thomas Addis Emmet - 1915 - 760 페이지
...transgressions, became his own executioner in the midst of his pride and power. Of whom Byron wrote: So Castlereagh has cut his throat ! The worst Of this...not the first! So he has cut his throat at last! He I Who? The man who cut his country's long ago! Shelley, in his "Masque of Anarchy," wrote: I met murder... | |
| Arthur Parker Stone, Stewart Lee Garrison - 1916 - 356 페이지
...of his fate : "So Castlereagh has cut his throat! The worst Of this is — that he cut his country's the first! So he has cut his throat at last! He! Who! The man who cut his country's long ago." Pitt got his way; the Irish Parliament was amalgamated with that of England, but the Catholics never... | |
| Arthur Parker Stone, Stewart Lee Garrison - 1916 - 360 페이지
...suicide, was said to have bought over twenty-five members. Byron wrote of him when he heard of his fate: "So Castlereagh has cut his throat! The worst Of this is — that he cut his country's the first! So he has cut his throat at last! He! Who! The man who cut his country's... | |
| Charles Ryle Fay - 1920 - 344 페이지
...Romilly, the lawyer, in 1818. On hearing of his death Byron gloated and delivered himself of epigrams : So Castlereagh has cut his throat ! — the worst Of this is — that his own was not the first. Byron also wrote an epitaph — but we must pass on. 1 In the reconstructed Tory Ministry of 1828,... | |
| Walter Jerrold - 1926 - 264 페이지
...; He perished rather than see Rome enslaved, Thou cutt'st thy throat that Britain may be saved ! ii So Castlereagh has cut his throat ! the worst Of this is — that his own was not the first. iii So he has cut his throat at last ! He ! Who ? The man who cut his country's long ago. Lord Byron.... | |
| George Gordon Byron - 1994 - 884 페이지
...Thou cntt'et tby throat that Britain may be saved I So Castlereagh has en t his throat I— The wont bsbtb Y a a XJ` I— He I Who ? The man who cat his country's long ago. EPITAPH. POSTERITY will ne'er survey A nobler... | |
| Charles Ryle Fay - 1947 - 328 페이지
...Romilly, the lawyer, in 1818. On hearing of his death Byron gloated and delivered himself of epigrams: So Castlereagh has cut his throat ! — the worst Of this is — that his own was not the first. Byron also wrote an epitaph — but we must pass on. 1 In the reconstructed Tory Ministry of 1828,... | |
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