Walker's Hibernian Magazine, Or, Compendium of Entertaining KnowledgeR. Gibson, 1804 |
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Seite 51
... volunteers amounts to 379,943 men ; completely trained and difciplined ; well clothed , armed , and furnished with accoutrements ; animat- ed with a patriotism more zealous than as ever felt by mercenary foldiers . The total annual ...
... volunteers amounts to 379,943 men ; completely trained and difciplined ; well clothed , armed , and furnished with accoutrements ; animat- ed with a patriotism more zealous than as ever felt by mercenary foldiers . The total annual ...
Seite 75
... Volunteer Affociations . Methinks I hear the echoing cries " O ye gods ! of joy , The found of trumpets , and the beat of drums . ' LEE . AT this important period , when the ftorm of war feems to be hovering over our heads , and ...
... Volunteer Affociations . Methinks I hear the echoing cries " O ye gods ! of joy , The found of trumpets , and the beat of drums . ' LEE . AT this important period , when the ftorm of war feems to be hovering over our heads , and ...
Seite 76
... VOLUNTEER . The Emigration . AMERICA , how haft thou drained Erin of her children ; what chafms haft thou made in almost every family ? the care - worn children of poverty have fled to thy fhores , with fanguine hopes of eafe and plenty ...
... VOLUNTEER . The Emigration . AMERICA , how haft thou drained Erin of her children ; what chafms haft thou made in almost every family ? the care - worn children of poverty have fled to thy fhores , with fanguine hopes of eafe and plenty ...
Seite 91
... volunteers of Great Britain and Ire- land , for the patriotifm and zeal with which they had come forward in the defence of their country . On the motion of mr . Sheridan , the thanks of the house of commons were voted to the volunteers ...
... volunteers of Great Britain and Ire- land , for the patriotifm and zeal with which they had come forward in the defence of their country . On the motion of mr . Sheridan , the thanks of the house of commons were voted to the volunteers ...
Seite 92
... volunteers of the eaftern diftrict of London , were reviewed by his majefty , in Hyde - park : they amounted to 12,401 . 28. His majefty reviewed , in Hyde- park , the volunteers of the weitern diftri & t of London , who mustered 14,676 ...
... volunteers of the eaftern diftrict of London , were reviewed by his majefty , in Hyde - park : they amounted to 12,401 . 28. His majefty reviewed , in Hyde- park , the volunteers of the weitern diftri & t of London , who mustered 14,676 ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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Beliebte Passagen
Seite 252 - A blank, my lord : She never told her love, But let concealment, like a worm i' the bud, Feed on her damask cheek : she pined in thought ; And, with a green and yellow melancholy, She sat like patience on a monument, Smiling at grief.
Seite 490 - Who are the parties ? The plaintiff, young, amiable, of family and education. Of the generous disinterestedness of his heart, you can form an opinion, even from the evidence of the defendant, that he declined an alliance, which would have added to his fortune and consideration, and which he rejected for an unportioned union with his present wife. She too at that time...
Seite 344 - Dare not th' infectious sigh ; the pleading look, Downcast, and low, in meek submission drest, But full of guile. Let not the fervent tongue, Prompt to deceive, with adulation smooth, Gain on your purpos'd will. Nor in the bower, Where woodbines flaunt, and roses shed a couch, While evening draws her crimson curtains round, Trust your soft minutes with betraying man. And let th...
Seite 491 - He indulged her, it seems, in dress — generous and attached, he probably indulged her in that point beyond his means ; and the defendant now impudently calls on you to find an excuse for the adulterer in the fondness and liberality of the husband. But you have been told that the husband connived. Odious and impudent aggravation of injury — to add calumny to insult, and outrage to dishonour ! From whom but a man hackneyed in the paths of shame and vice...
Seite 490 - Fatal and unquestionable is the truth of this assertion. Alas! gentlemen, she is no longer worth any thing — faded, fallen, degraded, and disgraced, she is worth less than nothing! But it is for the honour, the hope, the expectation, the tenderness, and the comforts that have been blasted by the defendant, and have fled for ever, that you are to remunerate the plaintiff, by the punishment of the defendant. It is not her present value which you are to weigh, but it is her value at that time, when...
Seite 197 - ... and draw it, in like manner, over the place which was stained, and particularly round the edges, to remove the border, that would still present a stain. By employing these means, with proper caution, the spot will totally disappear ; the paper will...
Seite 494 - In this odious contempt of every personal feeling, of public opinion, of common humanity, did he parade this woman to the sea-port, whence he transported his precious cargo to a country, where her example may be less mischievous than in her own; where I agree with my learned colleague in heartily wishing he may remain with her for ever. We are too poor, too simple, too unadvanced" a country, for the example of such achievements.
Seite 445 - The poor animal fell wounded, and, weltering in his blood, still endeavoured to crawl towards his master, as if to tax him with ingratitude. The merchant could not bear the sight ; he spurred on his horse with a heart full of sorrow, and lamented he had taken a journey which had cost him so dear. Still, however, the money never entered his mind ; he only thought of his poor dog, and tried to console himself with the reflection that he had prevented a greater evil by despatching a mad animal, than...
Seite 200 - There are many other matters, which at another time I might be inclined to mention, but I will say nothing more at present, than that in the present contest I am fully and entirely the aggressor, as well in the spirit as in the letter of the word ; should I, therefore, lose my life in a contest of my own seeking, I most solemnly forbid any of my friends or relations, let them be of whatsoever...
Seite 153 - The names of a select number of one sex are by an equal number of the other put into some vessel ; and after that every one draws a name, which for the present is called their Valentine, and is also look'd upon as a good omen of their being man and wife afterwards.