The Metropolitan, Band 41James Cochrane, 1844 |
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Seite 5
... meet with disasters , owing to the pusillanimity of Ethelred the Second , the reigning monarch . He ingloriously fled from London , leaving the citizens to defend their walls as they best could , when exposed to the assaults of the ...
... meet with disasters , owing to the pusillanimity of Ethelred the Second , the reigning monarch . He ingloriously fled from London , leaving the citizens to defend their walls as they best could , when exposed to the assaults of the ...
Seite 8
... meet her majesty . They were all attired in garments of the finest silk , richly embroidered with gold , and severally mounted on horses caparisoned in a style of dazzling splendour . Every citizen in this imposing procession bore a ...
... meet her majesty . They were all attired in garments of the finest silk , richly embroidered with gold , and severally mounted on horses caparisoned in a style of dazzling splendour . Every citizen in this imposing procession bore a ...
Seite 12
... meet immediate death by its opposite element - water . The amount of property , too , destroyed by this conflagration , was very great ; it burnt down a number of houses on either side of the river . In the space which intervened ...
... meet immediate death by its opposite element - water . The amount of property , too , destroyed by this conflagration , was very great ; it burnt down a number of houses on either side of the river . In the space which intervened ...
Seite 25
... meet queen Mary , and lay at her royal feet the offering of the nobility ; and Guy had no sooner cast his eyes upon the lovely band , than he turned deadly pale , and trembled in his seat at sight of a young girl of hardly fifteen years ...
... meet queen Mary , and lay at her royal feet the offering of the nobility ; and Guy had no sooner cast his eyes upon the lovely band , than he turned deadly pale , and trembled in his seat at sight of a young girl of hardly fifteen years ...
Seite 27
... meet with such , than in pity for her grievous and imminent peril . Anon , each fancied it a duty to participate in the coming ven- geance ; and when the sire of Terrides actually arrived , friendly voices were not wanting to tell him ...
... meet with such , than in pity for her grievous and imminent peril . Anon , each fancied it a duty to participate in the coming ven- geance ; and when the sire of Terrides actually arrived , friendly voices were not wanting to tell him ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Amanuensis appeared assegai attention Baden beautiful Biddulph Bloomer Breda Campbell ceremonies character cheek child church circumstances Colombe courser dark daughter dear death delight domestic Donnybrook Fair door Dublin duty Emily eyes face father fear feel felt friends gaze girl hand happiness Harland head heart honour hope hour husband interest Ireland Jokim Kafirs King lady lived London look Lord manner marriage married Mary Mary Ford mind moral morning mother Müller native nature never night occasion parents passed Patrick Butler persons poor present reader Repeal Association replied Rhine Rougemain scene Scrapington seemed seen side sister smile soon soul speak spirit stood streets sweet table d'hôte tears temperance movement thee thing Thomas Campbell thou thought tion took town voice walked whilst wife words young Zetza
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 132 - tis too horrible. The weariest and most loathed worldly life, That age, ache, penury, and imprisonment Can lay on nature, is a paradise To what we fear of death.
Seite 132 - Ay, but to die, and go we know not where; To lie in cold obstruction and to rot; This sensible warm motion to become A kneaded clod; and the delighted spirit To bathe in fiery floods, or to reside In thrilling region of thick-ribbed ice; To be imprison'd in the viewless winds, And blown with restless violence round about The pendent world: or to be worse than worst Of those that lawless and incertain thought Imagine howling: — 'tis too horrible! The weariest and most loathed worldly life That age,...
Seite 176 - And the LORD said unto Satan, Whence comest thou ? Then Satan answered the LORD, and said, From going to and fro in the earth, and from walking up and down in it.
Seite 176 - For the thing which I greatly feared is come upon me, and that which I was afraid of is come unto me.
Seite 542 - They rose in dark and evil days To right their native land; They kindled here a living blaze That nothing shall withstand. Alas! that Might can vanquish Right — They fell and passed away; But true men, like you men, Are plenty here today.
Seite 541 - We drink the memory of the brave, The faithful and the few: Some lie far off beyond the wave, Some sleep in Ireland, too; All, all are gone; but still lives on The fame of those who died; All true men, like you, men, -. Remember them with pride.
Seite 541 - The dust of some is Irish earth; Among their own they rest; And the same land that gave them birth Has caught them to her breast; And we will pray that from their clay Full many a race may start Of true men, like you, men, To act as brave a part.
Seite 262 - Margaret was buryed in the lower chancel, And William in the higher : Out of her brest there sprang a rose. And out of his a briar. They grew till they grew unto the church top, And then they could grow no higher ; And there they tyed in a true lovers knot, Which made all the people admire.
Seite 261 - When day was gone, and night was come, And all men fast asleep, Then came the spirit of fair Marg'ret, And stood at Williams feet.
Seite 434 - I am sure," writes a pupil who had no personal communications with him whilst at school, and but little afterwards, and who never was in the Sixth Form, " that I do not exaggerate my feelings when I say, that I felt a love and reverence for him as one of quite awful greatness and goodness, for whom I well remember that I used to think I would gladly lay down my life...