American Quarterly Review, Volumen21Carey, Lea & Carey, 1837 |
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Página 18
... honour destructive of the repose of society . They are suited , generally , to the atmosphere of the so - called higher classes , and upon them they work no beneficial effect . The humbler citizens , the labouring poor , who constitute ...
... honour destructive of the repose of society . They are suited , generally , to the atmosphere of the so - called higher classes , and upon them they work no beneficial effect . The humbler citizens , the labouring poor , who constitute ...
Página 24
... honours the lawyer earns between the court - rooms and his office . We only wish that more was made of the privilege of country life ; that the farmer's wife would steal some mo- ments from her cares to point out to her children the ...
... honours the lawyer earns between the court - rooms and his office . We only wish that more was made of the privilege of country life ; that the farmer's wife would steal some mo- ments from her cares to point out to her children the ...
Página 36
... honour of their patrons , in which the saints of Paradise were mingled with the deities of fable ; dramatic representations , miracles and mysteries in churches ; feasts of fools ; sacrilegious masses ; gravy soups eaten upon the altar ...
... honour of their patrons , in which the saints of Paradise were mingled with the deities of fable ; dramatic representations , miracles and mysteries in churches ; feasts of fools ; sacrilegious masses ; gravy soups eaten upon the altar ...
Página 42
... honours , their pomp , their rank ? Yet the mountebank player - the representative of Hamlet's Ghost - was the great phantom , the shade of the middle age , who rose upon the world like the evening star , just at a moment when the ...
... honours , their pomp , their rank ? Yet the mountebank player - the representative of Hamlet's Ghost - was the great phantom , the shade of the middle age , who rose upon the world like the evening star , just at a moment when the ...
Página 56
he must abandon the scenes where God had deigned to honour him with his presence . He says , ' Here I would frequent and to my sons relate On this mount He appeared , under this tree Stood visible , among these pines his voice I heard ...
he must abandon the scenes where God had deigned to honour him with his presence . He says , ' Here I would frequent and to my sons relate On this mount He appeared , under this tree Stood visible , among these pines his voice I heard ...
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admiration Adrastus agricultural Algiers American animal appears Bainbridge Ballymahon bark beautiful Bedouin called character Claude Frollo Colonel Burr colour command drama Edom effect England English Euripides excitement fame favour feelings fluid France French friends fruit gases genius give Goldsmith hand heart honour Huguenots human Idumea imagination insects interest Jefferson labour letter limbs literary live Lord Byron lottery matter ment mind Mirabeau moral nature never Northwest Company object observed OLIVER GOLDSMITH opera party pass passion pear perhaps person plant poet poetic poetry political possess present principle produce Quasimodo racter reader received regard remarks Robert le Diable scene sentiment Shakspeare ship society soil speak spirit taste thing thought tion tree truth United usury vessels virtue whole William Bainbridge writer XXI.-NO