. In the footsteps of Napoleon, his life and its famous scenes. LONGWOOD. The Nameless Grave, at St. Helena ST. HELENA 463 difficult strategy of English grammar, as one may see fromthe only English composition by him which has survived: Count Laseases—Since sixt week y learn the English andy do not any progress. Sixt week do fourty and two might have learn fivty words, for day, i could know it twotousands and two hundred. It is the dictionary more offourty thousand; even he could most twenty; hot much ofterns. For know it or hundred and twenty week, which domore two years. After this y


. In the footsteps of Napoleon, his life and its famous scenes. LONGWOOD. The Nameless Grave, at St. Helena ST. HELENA 463 difficult strategy of English grammar, as one may see fromthe only English composition by him which has survived: Count Laseases—Since sixt week y learn the English andy do not any progress. Sixt week do fourty and two might have learn fivty words, for day, i could know it twotousands and two hundred. It is the dictionary more offourty thousand; even he could most twenty; hot much ofterns. For know it or hundred and twenty week, which domore two years. After this you shall agree that the studyone tongue is a great labour who it must do into the youngaged, Longwood, this morning, the seven march thursday onethousand eight hundred sixteen after nativity the yors JesusChrist. Count Laseases, Chamellan of the S. M. Longwood; intohis palac; very press. Even as in his barrack days, so at St. Helena, Napoleonmade friends only with books, which always lay thicklystrewn about him. Sometimes he sat up all night with other times


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectnapoleo, bookyear1915