... there is something inexpressibly lonely in the solitude of a prairie. The loneliness of a forest seems nothing to it. There the view is shut in by trees, and the imagination is left free to picture some livelier scene beyond. But here we have an immense... The Knickerbocker: Or, New-York Monthly Magazine - Side 352redigert av - 1835Uten tilgangsbegrensning - Om denne boken
| 1972 - 560 sider
[ Beklager, innholdet på denne siden er tilgangsbegrenset. ] | |
| Donald A. Ringe - 1971 - 272 sider
[ Beklager, innholdet på denne siden er tilgangsbegrenset. ] | |
| Andrew B. Myers - 1976 - 554 sider
[ Beklager, innholdet på denne siden er tilgangsbegrenset. ] | |
| Washington Irving - 1979 - 560 sider
[ Beklager, innholdet på denne siden er tilgangsbegrenset. ] | |
| 1980 - 448 sider
[ Beklager, innholdet på denne siden er tilgangsbegrenset. ] | |
| Washington Irving - 1984 - 712 sider
[ Beklager, innholdet på denne siden er tilgangsbegrenset. ] | |
| Robert Thacker - 1989 - 320 sider
[ Beklager, innholdet på denne siden er tilgangsbegrenset. ] | |
| Robert Finch, John Elder - 1990 - 930 sider
...free to picture some livelier scene beyond. But here we have an immense extent of landscape without a sign of human existence. We have the consciousness...silence of the waste was now and then broken by the cry of a distant flock of pelicans, stalking like spectres about a shallow pool; sometimes by the sinister... | |
| Elizabeth Johns - 1991 - 292 sider
...free to picture some livelier scene beyond. But here we have an immense extent of landscape without a sign of human existence. We have the consciousness...feel as if moving in the midst of a desert world." In New England, Thoreau mused that he had an <io inner needle that was constantly pulled westward,... | |
| |