The United States Literary Gazette, Volumen3Cummings, Hilliard, & Company, 1826 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 90
Página 3
... given in the book now before us . The first chapters describe the position of Napoleon with respect to the various powers of Europe , and disclose the different motives which , with more or less weight , induced him to take the great ...
... given in the book now before us . The first chapters describe the position of Napoleon with respect to the various powers of Europe , and disclose the different motives which , with more or less weight , induced him to take the great ...
Página 4
... given up to him . At length , he arrived within sight of Smolensk , a city , which , from its size and its position , was considered the key of Old Russia . He found that Barclay and Bagration had hastened hither with all their forces ...
... given up to him . At length , he arrived within sight of Smolensk , a city , which , from its size and its position , was considered the key of Old Russia . He found that Barclay and Bagration had hastened hither with all their forces ...
Página 5
... given over to that judicial madness , which the prov- erb tells us the gods send upon whom they would destroy , - as to rush headlong upon ruin , which he alone was so foolish as not to see . Now , we cannot but think that Napoleon had ...
... given over to that judicial madness , which the prov- erb tells us the gods send upon whom they would destroy , - as to rush headlong upon ruin , which he alone was so foolish as not to see . Now , we cannot but think that Napoleon had ...
Página 6
... given in his adhesion at Tilsit , but of this he evidently repented and was rapidly approach- ing an union with England ; he was obviously identifying his interests with those which were necessarily opposed to the power of Napoleon ...
... given in his adhesion at Tilsit , but of this he evidently repented and was rapidly approach- ing an union with England ; he was obviously identifying his interests with those which were necessarily opposed to the power of Napoleon ...
Página 7
... given up to their invaders . Napoleon learned that they were in battle array before him , with trium- phant joy . " At length , " said he , " we have them in our pow- er . Let us march on and open the gates of Moscow . " The battle was ...
... given up to their invaders . Napoleon learned that they were in battle array before him , with trium- phant joy . " At length , " said he , " we have them in our pow- er . Let us march on and open the gates of Moscow . " The battle was ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
American ancient appear arts beautiful Bon homme Richard Boston capital character charter Church College common Corporation cotton Court Crocker & Brewster Dr Franklin duties edition employed employment England English established facts favour feelings Fellows foreign genius give hand Harvard College heart Hilliard honour human important improvement increase industry institutions instruction interest islands John Paul Jones kind knowledge labour language learned Literary Gazette manufacture means memorial memorialists ment Michael Forester mind moral Napoleon nation nature never non-resident object observed opinion orthoepy Overseers persons Philadelphia poetry political present principles Professor profit pupils question readers remarks resident respect Russia Samuel Danforth schools seems Serapis slaves Society Society Islands spirit taste thee thing thou Ticknor tion Tom Bell Tutors United volume wealth whole words York