an enlightened sovereign, far from attempting to introduce among them anything of European practice, would rather seek to develope those peculiar qualities, of which the germ evidently exists in these extraordinary people.' There is something in this... Kismet: Or, The Doom of Turkey - Page 13by Charles MacFarlane - 1853 - 452 pagesFull view - About this book
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1829 - 590 pages
...system, and the subsequent destruction of the janissaries, and the reform introduced among the spahis. Valentini observes, that ' an enlightened sovereign,...spahis, like the cossacks, were wild and disorderly iu their attacks, spreading themselves in small bodies, among the rocks and bushes, dashing down narrow... | |
| Georg Wilhelm freiherr von Valentini - 1828 - 160 pages
...greatest wisdom u . An enlightened sovereign, far from attempting to introduce among them any thing of European practice, would rather seek to develope...germ evidently exists in these extraordinary people'; and they might then again c He even calls himself the successor of Pyrrhus, because he rules over Epirus,... | |
| 1829 - 590 pages
...system, and the subsequent destruction of the janissaries, and the reform introduced among the spahis. Valentini observes, that ' an enlightened sovereign,...rocks and bushes, dashing down narrow passes, and, thiough places apparently impracticable, appearing suddenly and unexpectedly on the riant or rear of... | |
| 1829 - 586 pages
...from attempting to introduce auioug them anything of European practice, would rather seek to devefape those peculiar qualities, of which the germ evidently...rocks and bushes, dashing down narrow passes, and, thiough places apparently impracticable, appearing suddenly and unexpectedly on the flank or rear of... | |
| Robert Walsh, Eliakim Littell, John Jay Smith - 1828 - 802 pages
...their greatest wisdom. An enlightened sovereign, far from attempting to introduce among them »ny thing of European practice, would rather seek to develope...germ evidently exists in these extraordinary people ; and they might then again become formidable, if во t to the whole of Europe, at least to the neighbouring... | |
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