The London Magazine, Bind 8Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy, 1827 |
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Side 5
... turned into Latin , the master must compare it with Tully's book , and lay them both together ; and where the child doth well , either in chusing or placing Tully's words , let the master praise him , and say , Here you do well . For I ...
... turned into Latin , the master must compare it with Tully's book , and lay them both together ; and where the child doth well , either in chusing or placing Tully's words , let the master praise him , and say , Here you do well . For I ...
Side 12
... turning to me , " that gentleman I spoke to , is Mr. Yarnold of Drury Lane ; he is one of our right - hand men at the Coal - Hole , ( good heavens , what a nasty place that must be , thinks I , ) many and many's the order he's given me ...
... turning to me , " that gentleman I spoke to , is Mr. Yarnold of Drury Lane ; he is one of our right - hand men at the Coal - Hole , ( good heavens , what a nasty place that must be , thinks I , ) many and many's the order he's given me ...
Side 35
... turned to thee As to a visible god , and drew down thence An impress of divinity -- a hope , A spark of kindred immortality ; And truth and wisdom ; and knelt to thee in temples Not reared by human hands , but on the mountains The free ...
... turned to thee As to a visible god , and drew down thence An impress of divinity -- a hope , A spark of kindred immortality ; And truth and wisdom ; and knelt to thee in temples Not reared by human hands , but on the mountains The free ...
Side 43
... turned him from his design , and he too threw himself back in the carriage , that he might not be noticed either by the former companions of his glory , or the rivals of his power . Having at length escaped by driving over Westminster ...
... turned him from his design , and he too threw himself back in the carriage , that he might not be noticed either by the former companions of his glory , or the rivals of his power . Having at length escaped by driving over Westminster ...
Side 49
... turning by degrees to scorn itself , when Sir Bertie , with the familiar tone of an old friend , asked her how she did ; how long she had been in the country ; and reminded the young ladies of the happy evening he had once passed in ...
... turning by degrees to scorn itself , when Sir Bertie , with the familiar tone of an old friend , asked her how she did ; how long she had been in the country ; and reminded the young ladies of the happy evening he had once passed in ...
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amusing animal appeared banks beautiful bees believe better Burman called Captain Chancellor character circumstances colony course delight Dibdin ditto doubt effect emancipist emigrants England English eyes fact father favour feel Finmark French gentleman give Griquas Hammerfest hand head honour hundred Ireland Jew's harp John Bull Judson labour lady language Laplander larvæ living London look Lord Chancellor Lord Chatham Lord Eldon Lord Mowbray manner matter mind missionary morning nature never night object observed opera opinion party passed peculiar Pelasgians persons piece political poor possess present queen Rangoon remarkable rendered replied respect scene seemed Sir Jonah South Wales spirit suppose taste theatre Theobald Wolfe Tone thing Thomas Dibdin thought Tone traveller truth volumes whole words write young Zriny
Populære passager
Side 302 - It is of the Lord's mercies that we are not consumed, because his compassions fail not.
Side 356 - One man says, he has a thing made on purpose to tell him what is right and what is wrong; and that it is called a 'moral sense:' and then he goes to work at his ease, and says, such a thing is right, and such a thing is wrong - why? 'Because my moral sense tells me it is.
Side 284 - The glorious, pious and immortal memory of the great and good King William — not forgetting Oliver Cromwell, who assisted in redeeming us from Popery, slavery, arbitrary power, brass money and wooden shoes.
Side 282 - No one dared venture within the line of devastation. The hogs had been penned up in due time, the picking up of the dead and wounded being left for the next morning's employment. The pigeons were constantly coming, and it was past midnight before I perceived a decrease in the number of those that arrived.
Side 91 - The profits of a sugar plantation in any of our West Indian colonies, are generally much greater than those of any other cultivation that is known either in Europe or America...
Side 517 - That where any person hath or shall have any child or children under the age of one and twenty years, and not married at the time of his death, That it shall and may be lawful to and for the father of such child or children, whether born at the time of the decease of the father, or at that time in ventre sa mere...
Side 272 - European or American to acquire a living oriental language, root and branch, and make it his own, is quite a different thing from his acquiring a cognate language of the West, or any of the dead languages, as they are studied in the schools. One circumstance may serve to illustrate this. I once had occasion to devote about two months to the study of the French.
Side 413 - that, for the purpose of providing against the further decline and final extinction of the Indian tribes adjoining the frontier settlements of the United States, and for introducing among them the habits and arts of civilization...