The Pocket MagazineJames Robins, 1829 |
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Side 2
... say , a taste for the science of zoology was , until re- cently , very limited : our menageries were but scantily ... says the society , in the introduction , ' which we propose to ourselves in the collection of the most interesting ...
... say , a taste for the science of zoology was , until re- cently , very limited : our menageries were but scantily ... says the society , in the introduction , ' which we propose to ourselves in the collection of the most interesting ...
Side 25
... say begun : - : -- ' Now , lady mine ! what aileth thee ? Who wrong to thee hath done ? ' If of a Moor thou dost complain , The rash offender dies ; If of thy damsels , noble dame ! I them will soon chastise . And if the Christians thee ...
... say begun : - : -- ' Now , lady mine ! what aileth thee ? Who wrong to thee hath done ? ' If of a Moor thou dost complain , The rash offender dies ; If of thy damsels , noble dame ! I them will soon chastise . And if the Christians thee ...
Side 46
... says my author , slowly and steadily , his hands above his head , and in nine minutes he was at the other side of the Red Sea . On his return he told me what I knew to be a fact , that he had walked every step across , the deepest part ...
... says my author , slowly and steadily , his hands above his head , and in nine minutes he was at the other side of the Red Sea . On his return he told me what I knew to be a fact , that he had walked every step across , the deepest part ...
Side 47
... says , at Stratford by Bow is a bridge , the first that was built of stone in England . It was built by order of Queen Matilda , relict of Henry I. over the river Lea , and called Stratford Bow , from its arch , which was a piece of ...
... says , at Stratford by Bow is a bridge , the first that was built of stone in England . It was built by order of Queen Matilda , relict of Henry I. over the river Lea , and called Stratford Bow , from its arch , which was a piece of ...
Side 48
... says , ' We there see a man throwing three balls and three knives alternately into the air , and catching them one by one as they fall , but return- ing them again in rotation . To give the greater ap- pearance of difficulty to this ...
... says , ' We there see a man throwing three balls and three knives alternately into the air , and catching them one by one as they fall , but return- ing them again in rotation . To give the greater ap- pearance of difficulty to this ...
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Abencerrage amusements animal appeared arms beautiful Belgrave beneath breast bright castle caubeen Christian Clifden clouds Colonel Hill colour companion dark death delight Derby Derbyshire dreadful England exclaimed eyes fair fair Lady father fear feelings feet flowers French friends Giaours give Glencoe Grenada hand happy hast hath Hathersage head heard heart heaven Henry Fairfax honour hope horse hour human king lady LAKES OF KILLARNEY leopard live look Lord Lord Byron M'Donalds M'Leods master ment mind morning mountains Muza never night noble o'er officer passed person pheasant pleasure poet portmanteau present racter replied rocks round says scene seemed silence smile soon sorrow soul sound spirit spot stood stranger sweet tears thee thing Thorpe Cloud thou thought tiger tion Truxillo twas village walk whilst Winnets young youth
Populære passager
Side 253 - If music be the food of love, play on ; Give me excess of it, that, surfeiting, The appetite may sicken, and so die. That strain again ! it had a dying fall : O ! it came o'er my ear like the sweet sound That breathes upon a bank of violets, Stealing and giving odour.
Side 283 - Scholars only — this immense And glorious Work of fine intelligence! Give all thou canst ; high Heaven rejects the lore Of nicely-calculated less or more ; So deemed the man who fashioned for the sense These lofty pillars, spread that branching roof Self-poised, and scooped into ten thousand cells, Where light and shade repose, where music dwells Lingering — and wandering on as loth to die; Like thoughts whose very sweetness yieldeth proof That they were born for immortality.
Side 65 - Those who approach the study of this interesting subject with unbiassed minds will readily perceive that there must have existed an early period of lawlessness, in which it was with women as with other kinds of property, " that he should take who had the power, and he should keep who can " ; that wives were first obtained by force, then by theft, and later by trade and bargain.
Side 181 - You are to have especial care,' that the old fox and his sons do upon no account escape your hands. You are to secure all the avenues, that no man escape. This you are to put in execution at...
Side 183 - ... and demanding why the orders were transgressed in that particular, caused him instantly to be put to death. A boy, of five or six years old, clung to Glenlyon's knees, entreating for mercy, and offering to become his servant for life, if he would spare him. Glenlyon was moved ; but the same Drummond stabbed the child with his dirk, while he was in this agony of supplication. At a place called...
Side 178 - As for Mac Ian of Glencoe and that tribe, if they can be well distinguished from the other Highlanders, it will be proper, for the vindication of public justice, to extirpate that set of thieves.
Side 228 - Whatever withdraws us from the power of our senses, whatever makes the past, the distant, or the future predominate over the present, advances us in the dignity of thinking beings.
Side 94 - ANOTHER evidence of the antiquity of organs among the Anglo-Saxons has occurred to my observation in the works of Bede, a contemporary and survivor of Aldhelm. The passage is express, and also shows how they were made: — " An organum is a kind of tower made with various pipes, from which, by the blowing of bellows, a most copious sound is issued; and that a becoming modulation may accompany this, it is furnished with certain wooden tongues from the interior part, which the master's fingers skilfully...
Side 194 - ... and though exceedingly docile, his bravest acts were mostly tinctured with a grain of stupidity, which showed his reasoning faculty to be laughably obtuse. " I shall mention a striking instance of it. I was once at the farm of Shorthope on Ettrick head, receiving some lambs that I had bought, and was going to take to market, with some more, the next day. Owing to some accidental delay, I did not get final delivery of the lambs till it was growing late ; and being obliged to be at my own house...
Side 181 - This order was dated 12th February, and addressed, " For their Majesties' service, to Captain Robert Campbell of Glenlyon." This letter reached Glenlyon soon after it was written ; and he lost no time in carrying the dreadful mandate into execution. In the interval, he did not abstain from any of those acts of familiarity which had lulled asleep the suspicions of his victims. He took his morning draught, as...