| Caleb Sprague Henry, Joseph Green Cogswell - 1837 - 542 Seiten
...enterprise—of its gigantic resources — of its magnificent rivers, and forests, and scenery—still more proud should I be of its widely diffused education...imperishable memory of its heroic father and founder !" ART. X. —CRITICAL NOTICES. 1. Voyages Rtlations et Memoirs Originaux, pour screir a I'Histoire... | |
| Sir Charles Augustus Murray - 1854 - 364 Seiten
...magnificent rivers, and forests, and scenery — still more proud should I be of its widely-diffused education and independence, and of the imperishable...and contemptuous force of the original expression — oS ya^ Slumms Hi, &s A-xxiSxi. '' CHAPTER XVII. VEXATIOUS DISAPPOINTMENT — SAIL FOB ELIZABETH-TOWN... | |
| Caleb Sprague Henry, Joseph Green Cogswell - 1889 - 536 Seiten
...gigantic resources — of its magnificent rivers, and forests, and scenery — still more proud should 1 be of its widely diffused education and independence,...imperishable memory of its heroic father and founder !" ART. X. — CRITICAL NOTICES. 1. Voyages Relations et Mi'moirs Originaux, pour servir a I'Histoire... | |
| Louis Antoine Godey, Sarah Josepha Buell Hale - 1840 - 654 Seiten
...were an Ameriean, I confess I should be proud of my country — proud of its commereial prosperity — of its gigantic resources — of its magnificent rivers,...still more proud should I be of its widely diffused edueation and independence, and of the imperishable memory of its heroic father and founder.'' The... | |
| Jane Louise Mesick - 1922 - 400 Seiten
...American, I confess I should be proud of my country, proud of its commercial enterprise, — proud of its gigantic resources, — of its magnificent...its widely diffused education and independence, and the imperishable memory of its heroic father and founder!" 16 Hodgson, too, believed that the Americans... | |
| Sir Charles Augustus Murray - 1839 - 256 Seiten
...are charged by most travellers. Sometimes vanity will adopt the motto — " Esse quam videri," and then it becomes one of the noblest impulses that can...forthwith return to my narrative and to New York. CHAPTER XIV. Vexatious Disappointment. — Sail for Elizabeth-town. — Proceed to Plainfields and... | |
| |