Museum of Foreign Literature and Science, Volume 26Robert Walsh, Eliakim Littell, John Jay Smith E. Littell & T. Holden, 1835 |
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Halaman 13
... respect for past ages , of whose vices and follies less is necessarily known than of our own , M. De Saint- Hilaire attributes to the ancient anchorites more estimable qualities perhaps than belonged to them . The number of these ...
... respect for past ages , of whose vices and follies less is necessarily known than of our own , M. De Saint- Hilaire attributes to the ancient anchorites more estimable qualities perhaps than belonged to them . The number of these ...
Halaman 15
... respect for travellers , much as he is not only a distinguished antiquary than by a degree of ignorance scarcely credible . the editor of many rare books - but is also , as As a specimen of their rudeness , the author relates , we ...
... respect for travellers , much as he is not only a distinguished antiquary than by a degree of ignorance scarcely credible . the editor of many rare books - but is also , as As a specimen of their rudeness , the author relates , we ...
Halaman 18
... respect of their sicknesses a passage of Scripture- " The voice of thy bro- bygone , of the which they have recovered their ther's blood calleth unto me from the ground ; " health ; and certaine of them for their sickness and so ...
... respect of their sicknesses a passage of Scripture- " The voice of thy bro- bygone , of the which they have recovered their ther's blood calleth unto me from the ground ; " health ; and certaine of them for their sickness and so ...
Halaman 20
... respect . These advantages , coupled with the love of power , natural to the human heart , counterbalanced the hazard of a legal prosecution , and of a violent death at the hands of public jus- tice . Mr. Dalyell proposes the question ...
... respect . These advantages , coupled with the love of power , natural to the human heart , counterbalanced the hazard of a legal prosecution , and of a violent death at the hands of public jus- tice . Mr. Dalyell proposes the question ...
Halaman 30
... respect for the chief inhabitants of Massachussets would have return- magistrate ? —He is sure to get all he deserves . ed him to congress year after year , without more Is it an attachment to the institutions of the coun- evidence of ...
... respect for the chief inhabitants of Massachussets would have return- magistrate ? —He is sure to get all he deserves . ed him to congress year after year , without more Is it an attachment to the institutions of the coun- evidence of ...
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Bagian yang populer
Halaman 282 - O, for my sake do you with Fortune chide, The guilty goddess of my harmful deeds, That did not better for my life provide Than public means which public manners breeds. Thence comes it that my name receives a brand, And almost thence my nature is subdued To what it works in, like the dyer's hand...
Halaman 306 - Whither thou goest, I will go— thy people shall be my people, and thy God my God.
Halaman 283 - : — " Some say, good Will, which I, in sport, do sing, Had'st thou not played some kingly parts in sport, Thou hadst been a companion for a king, And been a King among the meaner sort.
Halaman 28 - Countries wear very different appearances to travellers of different circumstances. A man who is whirled through Europe in a post-chaise, and the pilgrim who walks the grand tour on foot, will form very different conclusions.
Halaman 280 - Jonson, which two I behold like a Spanish great galleon, and an English man-of-war ; Master Jonson (like the former) was built far higher in learning ; solid, but slow in his performances. Shakespeare...
Halaman 316 - Out upon Time! who for ever will leave But enough of the past for the future to grieve O'er that which...
Halaman 91 - SIR, I propose a cessation of hostilities for twenty-four hours, and that two officers may be appointed by each side, to meet at Mr. Moore's house, to settle terms for the surrender of the posts of York and Gloucester.
Halaman 218 - There wanted yet the master-work, the end Of all yet done ; a creature, who not prone And brute as other creatures, but endued With sanctity of reason, might erect His stature, and upright with front serene Govern the rest, self-knowing ; and from thence Magnanimous to correspond with heaven...
Halaman 78 - In the pauses of the showers, you heard the rumbling of the earth beneath, and the groaning waves of the tortured sea ; or, lower still, and audible but to the watch of intensest fear, the grinding and hissing murmur of the escaping gases through the chasms of the distant mountain.
Halaman 326 - All you want, at present, is quiet ; with this, if your ardour apHrreusiv can be kept in, till you are stronger, you will make noise enough. How happy the task, my noble amiable boy, to caution you only against pursuing too much, all those liberal and praiseworthy things, to which less happy natures are perpetually to be spurred and driven ! I will not tease you with too long a lecture in favour of inaction, and a competent stupidity, your two best tutors and companions at present.