Blackwood's Magazine, Bind 95W. Blackwood, 1864 |
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Side 2
... stood - the ob- ject of my vainglory suggested what depressed my shortlived tri- umph . " - It would have depressed it still more had he known that he was not in the place he sought . Where the Nile divides he had selected the Blue ...
... stood - the ob- ject of my vainglory suggested what depressed my shortlived tri- umph . " - It would have depressed it still more had he known that he was not in the place he sought . Where the Nile divides he had selected the Blue ...
Side 4
... stood on the brink of the Nile ; most beautiful was the the very perfection of the kind of effect scene - nothing could surpass it ! It was aimed at in a highly - kept park ; with a magnificent stream from 600 to 700 yards wide , dotted ...
... stood on the brink of the Nile ; most beautiful was the the very perfection of the kind of effect scene - nothing could surpass it ! It was aimed at in a highly - kept park ; with a magnificent stream from 600 to 700 yards wide , dotted ...
Side 10
... stood were covered with gigantic grass huts , thatched as neatly as so many heads dressed by a London barber , and fenced all round with the tall yellow reeds of the common Uganda tiger - grass ; whilst within the enclosure , the lines ...
... stood were covered with gigantic grass huts , thatched as neatly as so many heads dressed by a London barber , and fenced all round with the tall yellow reeds of the common Uganda tiger - grass ; whilst within the enclosure , the lines ...
Side 22
... stood in my way , and said he would never allow a man of his coun- try to give me any assistance until I was well , for he could not bear the idea of hearing it said that , after taking so many cloths from me , he had allowed me to die ...
... stood in my way , and said he would never allow a man of his coun- try to give me any assistance until I was well , for he could not bear the idea of hearing it said that , after taking so many cloths from me , he had allowed me to die ...
Side 33
... stood looking up at the closed shutters of the quiet house , which , to his eyes , represented a sort of peniten- tiary for that poor imprisoned hard- working girl . His head was not very clear , but he had just sense enough to remember ...
... stood looking up at the closed shutters of the quiet house , which , to his eyes , represented a sort of peniten- tiary for that poor imprisoned hard- working girl . His head was not very clear , but he had just sense enough to remember ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
Academy ain't asked Austrian banks body boys Butler called Carlingford course cried Curate dear Denmark door Duke of Burgundy Elsworthy Emperor England Europe eyes face favour feel fellow France French Galicia gave Germans girl give Government Grange Lane hand head hear heart Holstein honour hope kind king kingdom of Poland knew Lady Ana Lauenburg leave look Lord Lord Palmerston Lucy Maitland matter means ment mind Miss Wodehouse morning Napoleon nation nature never night once passed Poland Poles Polish poor Powers prefects present provinces question Rosa round royal Russia Schleswig scholars seemed sent ship side sion stand stood tell thing thought Ticino tion told Tony TONY BUTLER took Trafalgar Square turned Uganda Volhynia walk warden Wentworth whole Winchester words Wykehamists XCV.-NO young
Populære passager
Side 1 - Wasoga and Waganda fishermen coming out in boats and taking post on all the rocks with rod and hook, hippopotami and crocodiles lying sleepily on the water, the ferry at work above the falls, and cattle driven down to drink at the margin of the lake, — made, in all, with the pretty nature of the country — small hills, grassy-topped, with trees in the folds, and gardens on the lower slopes — as interesting a picture as one could wish to see.
Side 16 - I had given him with his own hands, and giving it full-cock to a page, told him to go out and shoot a man in the outer court ; which was no sooner accomplished than the little urchin returned to announce his success, with a look of glee such as one would see in the face of a boy who had robbed a bird's nest, caught a trout, or done any other boyish trick. The king said to him, 'And did you do it well?
Side 2 - But I felt I ought to be content with what I had been spared to accomplish; for I had seen full half of the lake, and had information given me of the other half, by means of which I knew all about the lake, as far, at least, as the chief objects of geographical importance were concerned.
Side 8 - There courtiers of high dignity stepped forward to greet me, dressed in the most scrupulously neat fashions. Men, women, bulls, dogs, and goats, were led about by strings ; cocks and hens were carried in men's arms; and little pages, with...
Side 216 - Hemmings volunteered to walk with her to the corner ; and it is not necessary to say that she immediately plunged into the topic which at that moment engaged all minds in Carlingford. " If I had not seen it with my own eyes, I should not have believed it,
Side 414 - ... without actual malice, and without gross negligence; and that before the commencement of the action, or at the earliest opportunity afterwards...
Side 309 - Saturday night it had somewhat abated. The Bank had taken a firm and deliberate resolution to make common cause with the country, as far as their humble efforts would go.
Side 113 - This is a matter for serious reflection. Let us not delay taking a decision until sudden and irresistible events disturb our judgment and draw us in spite of ourselves in opposite directions. I now, therefore, propose to your Majesty to regulate the present and to secure the future by means of a Congress.