Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, المجلد 84W. Blackwood, 1858 |
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الصفحة 6
... object of human inquiry and thought , be- cause people were taught to keep their feet dry , eat wholesome food , avoid dissipation , and wash and shave themselves , before Mr Chadwick was born . They have not discovered any new ...
... object of human inquiry and thought , be- cause people were taught to keep their feet dry , eat wholesome food , avoid dissipation , and wash and shave themselves , before Mr Chadwick was born . They have not discovered any new ...
الصفحة 9
... object which war is so naturally apt to assume- the object of private plunder - has been sternly put down . The Duke of Wellington's great campaign in the Peninsula was a long resolute practical lesson against it on land ; the ...
... object which war is so naturally apt to assume- the object of private plunder - has been sternly put down . The Duke of Wellington's great campaign in the Peninsula was a long resolute practical lesson against it on land ; the ...
الصفحة 12
... object is merely to afford a general notion of the tendency of Cook's arrangements , not to instruct future circumnavigators how to pre- serve their men , we need not quote farther . * He gives , with becoming seriousness , the reason ...
... object is merely to afford a general notion of the tendency of Cook's arrangements , not to instruct future circumnavigators how to pre- serve their men , we need not quote farther . * He gives , with becoming seriousness , the reason ...
الصفحة 14
... object of goodness or duty , which it deems to be its own special mission . It passes down through lower grades of ardour , until it becomes the conven- tional pride of aptness in some pro- fessional or even mechanical pursuit . Perhaps ...
... object of goodness or duty , which it deems to be its own special mission . It passes down through lower grades of ardour , until it becomes the conven- tional pride of aptness in some pro- fessional or even mechanical pursuit . Perhaps ...
الصفحة 19
... object of pleading the soldier's claim for whatever aids to health and vitality science has given to the world , we have not thought it neces- sary at present to enter on the de- tails of sanitary science , reserving it for an early ...
... object of pleading the soldier's claim for whatever aids to health and vitality science has given to the world , we have not thought it neces- sary at present to enter on the de- tails of sanitary science , reserving it for an early ...
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Allahabad animals Arabella arms army arteries auricles ballads beauty blood boyarie breath called Calpee carbonic acid cause Cawnpore Cherbourg child chyle Colonel Cutts dark Darrell's death Doab enemy eyes face fact father Fawley feel force George Morley give guns Guy Darrell Gwalior hand head heard heart heat Homer honour hope human India Jasper Losely Kangra lacteals Lady Montfort less light Lionel live look Lucknow ment mind Morley morning Native Infantry nature ness never night noble once oxygen passed perhaps poor present Punjaub Quamino Respiration Rose round scene seemed Sepoys Serjeant-at-Arms side Sikhs Sophy soul spirit stood strong tell temperature things thought tion Trevenna troops true turn voice Waife Whigs whole William Losely words young youth
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة 410 - I knew a very wise man so much of Sir Chr — 's sentiment, that he believed if a man were permitted to make all the ballads, he need not care who should make the laws of a nation.
الصفحة 465 - To do good to others ; to sacrifice for their benefit your own wishes ; to love your neighbour as yourself; to forgive your enemies; to restrain your passions; to honour your parents; to respect those who are set over you : these, and a few others, are the sole essentials of morals; but they have been known for thousands of years, and not one jot or tittle has been added to them by all the sermons, homilies, and text-books which moralists and theologians have been able to produce.
الصفحة 257 - Your charms would make me true. To you no soul shall bear deceit, No stranger offer wrong; But friends in all the aged you'll meet, And lovers in the young. But when they learn that you have blest Another with your heart, They'll bid aspiring passion rest...
الصفحة 415 - My blessin' and my pride; There's nothing left to care for now, Since my poor Mary died. Yours was the good, brave heart, Mary, That still kept hoping on, When the trust in God had left my soul, And my arm's young strength was gone; There was comfort ever on your lip, And the kind look on your brow, — 1 bless you, Mary, for that same, Though you cannot hear me now.
الصفحة 102 - And old shoes and clouted upon their feet, and old garments upon them; and all the bread of their provision was dry and mouldy.
الصفحة 523 - O, thou child of many prayers ! Life hath quicksands, Life hath snares ! Care and age come unawares ! Like the swell of some sweet tune, Morning rises into noon, May glides onward into June.
الصفحة 193 - Onward they came in their joy, and around them the lamps of the sea-nymphs, Myriad fiery globes, swam panting and heaving ; and rainbows Crimson and azure and emerald, were broken in star-showers, lighting Far through the wine-dark depths of the crystal, the gardens Coral and sea-fan and tangle, the blooms and the palms of, the ocean.
الصفحة 418 - Nor scream can any raise, nor prayer can any say, But wild, wild, the terror of the speechless three — For they feel fair Anna Grace drawn silently away, By whom they dare not look to see. They feel their tresses twine with her parting locks of gold, And the curls elastic falling, as her head withdraws ; They feel her sliding arms from their tranced arms unfold, But they...
الصفحة 417 - Are hushed the maidens' voices, as cowering down they lie In the flutter of their sudden awe. For, from the air above, and the grassy ground beneath, And from the mountain-ashes and the old whitethorn between, A power of faint enchantment doth through their beings breathe, And they sink down together on the green.