Leisure-moments in the Camp and in the Guard-roomT. Wilson & Son, 1812 - 204 sider |
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Side 12
... thought or pain , And , nodding , slumber'd out a lazy reign ! A faineant Prince is a political excrescence , and ought to be lopped off - an anomaly in a free state . B QUACKERY . THE prescriptions of Empirics , with which the LEISURE ...
... thought or pain , And , nodding , slumber'd out a lazy reign ! A faineant Prince is a political excrescence , and ought to be lopped off - an anomaly in a free state . B QUACKERY . THE prescriptions of Empirics , with which the LEISURE ...
Side 12
... thoughts , which , though obvi- ously just in themselves , are not unfrequently deem- ed incoherent by great literary characters ; such is the well - known sentiment of VIRGIL , with respect to the paramount power of Virtue , when ...
... thoughts , which , though obvi- ously just in themselves , are not unfrequently deem- ed incoherent by great literary characters ; such is the well - known sentiment of VIRGIL , with respect to the paramount power of Virtue , when ...
Side 14
... thought of a very fine Lady , who , though verging on her eight lustre , was far advanced in pregnancy , answered " She is like a stately orange- tree , at once in bloom and bearing fruit- Miscens- autumni ac veris honores ' - parading ...
... thought of a very fine Lady , who , though verging on her eight lustre , was far advanced in pregnancy , answered " She is like a stately orange- tree , at once in bloom and bearing fruit- Miscens- autumni ac veris honores ' - parading ...
Side 22
... thought of every thing , and was equal to every thing ; but then he would wallow in indolence and sensuality , almost more than a woman , when unemployed in state affairs . " Vir ubi res vigiliam exigeret sanè exsomni providens atque ...
... thought of every thing , and was equal to every thing ; but then he would wallow in indolence and sensuality , almost more than a woman , when unemployed in state affairs . " Vir ubi res vigiliam exigeret sanè exsomni providens atque ...
Side 36
... thought , it renders it not only gloomy , but sullen . Metaphor , properly so denominated , rejects every species of extraneous image ; the similitude must be scrupulously kept up , or it fails in it's essential part . If this precept ...
... thought , it renders it not only gloomy , but sullen . Metaphor , properly so denominated , rejects every species of extraneous image ; the similitude must be scrupulously kept up , or it fails in it's essential part . If this precept ...
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Leisure-Moments in the Camp and in the Guard-Room J F Neville Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2019 |
Leisure-Moments in the Camp and in the Guard-Room (Classic Reprint) J. F. Neville Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2018 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
21st Light Dragoons Abbé acquainted admiration ALAMANNI alluded amiable answer army assertion atque Battle of Fontenoy beauty BELISARIUS blood British BRUNTON called Captain CATULLUS CESAR character chimæra Christian circum circumstance Citizen Colonel command death degree Doctor DUKE of YORK Earl elegant eminent England English evinced excellent exclaimed expressions fame favour female fortune France French Frenchmen Gentleman Glory heroes honour human HUNMANBY idea illustrious Irish Jacobins knew Lady land language Latin learned liberty Lieutenant Lord Madame CAMPAN magnanimity manner Marquis MERCIER metaphor military mind Monsieur moral nation native nature never noble Nottinghamshire occasion officer orator Paris pious poet political POMPEY possess Prince proved quæ quod rank respect Roman Rome Royal Highness SALLUST society soldier soon soul SUETONIUS TAMERLANE Teinturier thing thou tion troops valour victory virtue VOLTAIRE West Kent Militia word
Populære avsnitt
Side 12 - Let others better mould the running mass Of metals, and inform the breathing brass, And soften into flesh a marble face; Plead better at the bar; describe the skies, And when the stars descend, and when they rise: But, Rome! 'tis thine alone, with awful sway, « To rule mankind, and make the world obey, Disposing peace and war thy own majestic way; To tame the proud, the fetter'd slave to free: These are imperial arts, and worthy thee.
Side 90 - His life was gentle, and the elements So mix'd in him that Nature might stand up And say to all the world, 'This was a man!
Side 41 - I will wash my hands in innocency, and so will I compass thine altar, O Lord.
Side 203 - Nor did woman — oh woman! whose form and whose soul Are the spell and the light of each path we pursue ; Whether sunn'd in the tropics or chill'd at the pole, If woman be there, there is happiness too...
Side 156 - Unworthy rais'd, the Worthy cast below. But leaving that : Search we the secret Springs, And backward trace the Principles of Things ; There shall we find, that when the World began, One common Mass...
Side 13 - Dessus l'externe où la douleur te pique; Et tu boiras le reste promptement Pour te guérir. Sur cet avis ne sois point hérétique; Car je te fais un serment authentique Que si tu crains ce doux médicament, Ton médecin, pour ton soulagement, Fera l'essai de ce qu'il communique Pour te guérir.
Side 157 - Uncancell'd, though disused ; and he, whose mind Is virtuous, is alone of noble kind ; Though poor in fortune, of celestial race; And he commits the crime who calls him base.
Side 82 - When Glory, like the dazzling Eagle, stood Perch'd on my Beaver, in the Granic Flood, When Fortune's Self my Standard trembling bore, And the pale Fates stood frighted on the Shore, When the Immortals on the Billows rode, And I myself appear'd the leading God.
Side 31 - ... aut igneum. His enim in naturis nihil inest, quod vim memoriae, mentis, cogitationis habeat, quod et praeterita teneat et futura provideat et complecti possit praesentia. Quae sola divina sunt, nee invenietur umquam unde ad hominem venire possint nisi a deo.
Side 194 - Tircis, ne te plains plus, Je vais mettre fin à ta peine; Je te promets un regard de Caylus.