The Juvenile Budget Re-opened: Being Further Selections from the Writings of Doctor John Aikin ; with Copious NotesHarper, 1847 - 250 sider |
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Side 3
... pleasure , than that of writing for the amusement and instruction of children ; and we believe his lit- tle works for little folks have exerted the widest and happiest influence , and should be the most highly cherished , of all his ...
... pleasure , than that of writing for the amusement and instruction of children ; and we believe his lit- tle works for little folks have exerted the widest and happiest influence , and should be the most highly cherished , of all his ...
Side 4
... pleasure to his heart . " This Volume consists of selections from his con- tributions to Evenings at Home , ' his ' Letters from a Father to his Son , ' and his miscellaneous pieces . A former Volume of the Juvenile Series of ' THE ...
... pleasure to his heart . " This Volume consists of selections from his con- tributions to Evenings at Home , ' his ' Letters from a Father to his Son , ' and his miscellaneous pieces . A former Volume of the Juvenile Series of ' THE ...
Side 6
... 197 Aphorisms of Mind and Manners , 209 On Cheap Pleasures , 211 • History and Biography estimated , 221 On the Best Mode of Encountering the Evils of Life , 334 JUVENILE BUDGET REOPENED THE FARM - YARD JOURNAL . DEAR 6 CONTENTS .
... 197 Aphorisms of Mind and Manners , 209 On Cheap Pleasures , 211 • History and Biography estimated , 221 On the Best Mode of Encountering the Evils of Life , 334 JUVENILE BUDGET REOPENED THE FARM - YARD JOURNAL . DEAR 6 CONTENTS .
Side 22
... - less , he escaped without material injury , and , after lying awhile , came to himself , again . But what was his pleasure and surprise , to find himself in the very tree which contained his nest ! Ah 22 THE DISCONTENTED SQUIRREL .
... - less , he escaped without material injury , and , after lying awhile , came to himself , again . But what was his pleasure and surprise , to find himself in the very tree which contained his nest ! Ah 22 THE DISCONTENTED SQUIRREL .
Side 26
... pleasures . But do you recollect that the children of Mr. White , the baker , and Mr. Shape , the tailor , might , with equal propriety , ask the same questions about you ? S. How so ? Mrs. M. Are not you as 26 A DIALOGUE ON.
... pleasures . But do you recollect that the children of Mr. White , the baker , and Mr. Shape , the tailor , might , with equal propriety , ask the same questions about you ? S. How so ? Mrs. M. Are not you as 26 A DIALOGUE ON.
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The Juvenile Budget Reopened: Being Further Selections From the Writings of ... John Aikin Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2015 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
able admiration Æneid Amelia amusement animals Athens biography birds bless born brought burning streams Cæsar called Capriole Captain celebrated character Cicero clothes companions constellations creature cried Cuma daugh dear Demosthenes died Edward father federacies feel fell fortune friends Genoa give grass Greenland habit hand happy heart human Indur inhabitants Jean Racine JOHN AIKIN Julius Cæsar kind King labor length live lodgings look mamma manner master Messenia mind mother native Nature necessary neighbor nest never niece night obliged pass Pelew Islands plain pleasure poor Pope Leo X possessed pursuit replied robber round sails scarcely scene sensible ship side soon spirit suppose sure taste ten thousand Greeks thing thou thought tion took town tree Trojan War Uberto uncon VIII wheat young
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Side 113 - But if I have taken like a king, I have given like a king. If I have subverted empires, I have founded greater. I have cherished arts, commerce, and philosophy.
Side 52 - Like verdant isles the sable waste adorn. Let India boast her plants, nor envy we The weeping amber or the balmy tree, While by our oaks the precious loads are borne, And realms commanded which those trees adorn.
Side 134 - No doubt, it is right to wish well to our country, as far as its prosperity can be promoted without injuring the rest of mankind. But wars are very seldom to the real advantage of any nation ; and when they are ever so useful or necessary, so many dreadful evils attend them, that a humane man will scarcely rejoice in them, if he considers at all on the subject.
Side 112 - Alexander, I am your captive. I must hear what you please to say, and endure what you please to inflict. But my soul is unconquered ; and if I reply at all to your reproaches, I will reply like a free man.
Side 131 - The other female then advanced. She was clothed in a close habit of brown stuff', simply relieved with white. She wore her smooth hair under a plain cap. Her whole person was perfectly neat and clean. Her look was serious, but satisfied ; and her air was staid and composed. She held in one hand a distaff; on the opposite arm hung a work-basket ; and the girdle round her waist was garnished with scissors, knitting-needles, reels, and other implements of female labour.
Side 149 - Uberto kept him some time at his house, treating him with all the respect and affection he could have shown for the son of his dearest friend. At length, having a safe opportunity of sending him to Genoa, he gave him a faithful servant for a conductor, fitted him out with every convenience, slipped a purse of gold into one hand and a letter into the other, and thus addressed him : — 13.
Side 135 - Yes—but they are men on both sides. Consider, now, that the ten thousand sent out of the world in this morning's work, though they are past feeling themselves, have left probably two persons each, on an average, to lament their loss, either parents, wives, or children. Here are then twenty thousand people made unhappy at one stroke on their account. This* however, is hardly so dreadful to think of as the condition of the wounded.
Side 147 - They used their victory with considerable rigour; and in particular, having imprisoned Uberto, proceeded against him as a traitor, and thought they displayed sufficient lenity in passing a sentence upon him of perpetual banishment, and the confiscation of all his property.
Side 45 - Martins are a kind of swallows. They feed on flies, gnats, and other insects ; and always build in towns and villages about the houses. People do not molest them, for they do good rather than harm ; and it is very amusing to view their manners and actions. See how swiftly they skim through the air in pursuit of their prey ! In the morning they are up by daybreak, and twitter about your window while you are asleep in bed ; and all day long they are upon the wing, getting food for themselves and their...
Side 65 - The Pleiads, Hyads, with the northern team ; And great Orion's more refulgent beam ; To which, around the axle of the sky, The Bear, revolving, points his golden eye, Still shines exalted on the ethereal plain, Nor bathes his blazing forehead in the main.