What had I to do with Spanish
grandees? And for that matter what had she, the woman of all time, to do with all the villainous or splendid disguises human dust takes upon itself?
"There are lords and
grandees in Spain to whom they can be dedicated," said the cousin.
Their villages or towns consist of these huts; yet even of such villages they have but few, because the
grandees, the viceroys, and the Emperor himself are always in the camp, that they may be prepared, upon the most sudden summons, to go where the exigence of affairs demands their presence.
They had the bloom of health and happiness; and yet, as if I had been in charge of a pair of little
grandees, of princes of the blood, for whom everything, to be right, would have to be enclosed and protected, the only form that, in my fancy, the afteryears could take for them was that of a romantic, a really royal extension of the garden and the park.
Then she would come out of her dream, and look round at the
grandees of the Gardens with an extraordinary elation.
And now the Emperor, with all the
grandees of his court, came to the weavers; and the rogues raised their arms, as if in the act of holding something up, saying, "Here are your Majesty's trousers!
"Well, yes - it IS a little different from the idea I had - but I thought I might go around and get acquainted with the
grandees, anyway - not exactly splice the main-brace with them, you know, but shake hands and pass the time of day."
There we found nine or ten Black Forest
grandees assembled around a table.
For, after having been accustomed several months to the sight and converse of this people, and observed every object upon which I cast mine eyes to be of proportionable magnitude, the horror I had at first conceived from their bulk and aspect was so far worn off, that if I had then beheld a company of English lords and ladies in their finery and birth-day clothes, acting their several parts in the most courtly manner of strutting, and bowing, and prating, to say the truth, I should have been strongly tempted to laugh as much at them as the king and his
grandees did at me.
This stout young man was an illegitimate son of Count Bezukhov, a well-known
grandee of Catherine's time who now lay dying in Moscow.
Pembroke Howard, lawyer and bachelor, aged almost forty, was another old Virginian
grandee with proved descent from the First Families.
Marco was appalled, and held his breath; and when the
grandee accepted, he was so grateful that he almost forgot to be astonished at the condescension.