Lydia: Or, Filial Piety. A Novel, Bind 1S. Cotter, 1763 |
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Side 7
... shall teach him to recall these dire De- ftroyers , or his Word fhall bid them to be just to the Engagements which they fhall hereafter make .. " WITH him Cannassatego will fmoke the Calmut " of Peace , and brighten up the Chain between ...
... shall teach him to recall these dire De- ftroyers , or his Word fhall bid them to be just to the Engagements which they fhall hereafter make .. " WITH him Cannassatego will fmoke the Calmut " of Peace , and brighten up the Chain between ...
Side 15
... Shall it be faid , that Cannassatego , " enthrailed by Love and Woman , renounced his " Country's Good , and broke his Refolutions ? Shall " I become the Jeft of Boys , and all my Fame in War " and Victory be drowned in Female Arms ...
... Shall it be faid , that Cannassatego , " enthrailed by Love and Woman , renounced his " Country's Good , and broke his Refolutions ? Shall " I become the Jeft of Boys , and all my Fame in War " and Victory be drowned in Female Arms ...
Side 16
... I feel no Pain " but what proceeds from you alone , my more than " Life and Liberty . Shall I declare , I dread to tell thee , " replied the Indian Chief . 66 " OH 66 " OH tell me all , what cannot Tarico 16 LY DI A.
... I feel no Pain " but what proceeds from you alone , my more than " Life and Liberty . Shall I declare , I dread to tell thee , " replied the Indian Chief . 66 " OH 66 " OH tell me all , what cannot Tarico 16 LY DI A.
Side 17
... shall be my Fate , fhall I be thine this << Day , or wafte whole tedious Revolutions of the " Sun , to make me yet more worthy of thy Beauties " and Acceptance . " HAVING thus difcourfed together , the hung upon his Arm gazing often on ...
... shall be my Fate , fhall I be thine this << Day , or wafte whole tedious Revolutions of the " Sun , to make me yet more worthy of thy Beauties " and Acceptance . " HAVING thus difcourfed together , the hung upon his Arm gazing often on ...
Side 19
... " Accident of preferving her Life , and being preferved " by her , has too effectually bound my Hands and " Heart , in the willing Bands of Love ; tell me then , ; one my 16 my dearest Friend , how shall I appear before LYDI 19 A.
... " Accident of preferving her Life , and being preferved " by her , has too effectually bound my Hands and " Heart , in the willing Bands of Love ; tell me then , ; one my 16 my dearest Friend , how shall I appear before LYDI 19 A.
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affert Affiftance againſt alfo anſwered Arms arrife becauſe Bofom Cannaffatego Captain Charles Bounce Caufe Cayugan Cofin Company conceived Confequence Converfation Courage cried David Pugh dear Defign defired Difpofition Excifeman Expreffion Eyes fafe faid faith fame fave fays fhe feems feized ferve fhall fhews fhould firft Flimfy fome fomething foon Friend ftill fuch fuffer fure Gentleman Heart Heaven herſelf Hiftory himſelf Honourable Captain Charles Horfe Houfe Houſe Indian Chief Inftance inteed Lady laft lefs Lieutenant Probit look Lord Love Lydia Fairchild Mac Valor Maid Mifs Lydia Mifs Whinny moft moſt Muckworm muft muſt neceffary never Obfervation Occafion Onnondagan Paffion pafs paft Parfon Pugh pleaſe Popkins prefent preferved Rachael Stiffrump Reaſon Refolution ſhall ſhe Ship Soul Story Sweetwood tell thee thefe thefe Words theſe Thing thofe thoſe thouſand thro Underſtanding vifit Virtue Viſcount Voyage whas Whig whill whofe Woman Yarico young Squire Price
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Side 179 - Their medicinal gum. Set you down this ; And say besides, that in Aleppo once, Where a malignant and a turban'd Turk Beat a Venetian and traduced the state, I took by the throat the circumcised dog, And smote him, thus.
Side 85 - Who can stand before his indignation; and who can abide in the fierceness of his anger ; his fury is poured out like fire, and the rocks are thrown down by him.
Side 80 - Testament tells us how we lost immortality, not that we are immortal, does it ? Answer. Yes ; it tells us how we lost it. Question. Was God afraid that Adam and Eve might get back into the garden, and eat of the fruit of the tree of life ? Answer.
Side 170 - No more of that. I pray you, in your letters, When you shall these unlucky deeds relate, Speak of me as I am ; nothing extenuate, Nor set down aught in malice...
Side 2 - ... his bosom, within which his heart beat with honest throbbing for his country's service. . . . The air, attitude, and expression of the beauteous statue of Apollo, which adorns the Belvidera palace at Rome, were seen animated in this American the instant he had discharged his deadly shaft.
Side 1 - ... thunder from the cloud-capt mountains ; deep embosomed in the eternal woods of America, dwell the ancient nations of the Onnondagans and Cayugans. No people are equally renowned through all the western world, from the northern bleakest track which human feet have ever trodden, to the most southern point of all this habitable globe. Their names pronounced with terror by the nations round; their valour recognized beyond all other people; the tributes annually received from other kingdoms ; evince...
Side 154 - Employment, or if the great Spirit had made two Species of Men, one inferior to another, and the Idler deftined to the Service of the greater...
Side 49 - THE Squire, tho' a Juftice of the Peace, and had taken the Oaths of Allegiance to the King upon the Throne, had ftill a fmall Inclination remaining for the Stuarts ; and the Excifeman was a moft flaunch Whig, for the fame...
Side 196 - To be or not to be" soliloquy. An interview is arranged with John Rich. When asked about his roles, Cook lists Othello, Hamlet, Jaffeir, and Polydore, "which I have play'd in the Country." 'Well, then, says the Patentee, 'give me the Soliloquy in Hamlet.' At these Words Mr. Cook began, 'To be, or not to be'; beginning and ending with an extremely low Bow to Mr. R — h; which Bows were well received, and added weight to the speaking. 'Why this may do, Mr. Cook; I thi — nk your Name is Cook...
Side 154 - Instead of pomp and splendor, vast palaces and magnificent temples, of which he had before heard, he saw little better than the huts of Indians, and a parcel of people with their faces blacker than his own.