Prose,Abraham Small. William Brown, printer, 1824 |
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Page 9
... heart of affection, among millions and millions of beings, of divers climes, and languages, and governments, who had been heretofore fellow- sufferers without sympathy, and mortal enemies without knowledge of each other. The plough was ...
... heart of affection, among millions and millions of beings, of divers climes, and languages, and governments, who had been heretofore fellow- sufferers without sympathy, and mortal enemies without knowledge of each other. The plough was ...
Page 11
... heart ; while a voice, more terrible than he had ever heard during the French Revolution, from the tribune, the guillotine, or the throne, thundered in his ears, " Lc congres est dessous." He started up, and the first object he saw ...
... heart ; while a voice, more terrible than he had ever heard during the French Revolution, from the tribune, the guillotine, or the throne, thundered in his ears, " Lc congres est dessous." He started up, and the first object he saw ...
Page 23
... heart of this Boeotian district, there happened to be an auction in the inn-yard where we changed horses. The man of the hammer was selling blankets, and I was perhaps more amused with his wit, level as it was with the soil, than if it ...
... heart of this Boeotian district, there happened to be an auction in the inn-yard where we changed horses. The man of the hammer was selling blankets, and I was perhaps more amused with his wit, level as it was with the soil, than if it ...
Page 25
... heart, from which it is circulated, like a thick and baneful fluid, through every artery and vein, till the whole frame of soul and body, reciprocally affecting each other, is sensible to wretchedness alone, — and wretchedness so ...
... heart, from which it is circulated, like a thick and baneful fluid, through every artery and vein, till the whole frame of soul and body, reciprocally affecting each other, is sensible to wretchedness alone, — and wretchedness so ...
Page 27
... . P." was the answer, and the right one too ; for the rooms which I wanted were not at liberty, and those which I did not want were. The disappointment was not a heart-breaking one ; it was only a question of economy, AS SCARBOROUGH. 27.
... . P." was the answer, and the right one too ; for the rooms which I wanted were not at liberty, and those which I did not want were. The disappointment was not a heart-breaking one ; it was only a question of economy, AS SCARBOROUGH. 27.
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Africa age of reason amidst angels appeared Babylon beautiful beneath blind body called Cape Town Castle Hill character Christian church church-yard colony crew darkness dead death degra dream Driffield earth eternity everlasting face Falsgrave fear feel gentleman George George Collier glen glory grew ground Guadaloupe Guy Mannering hand happened Harrogate hath head heard heart heaven High Harrogate Holy Inquisition honour hope Hottentots hour human hundred imagination inhabitants Kloof knew kraal labour ladies last day latter light lived look Lord lordship Market Weighton Matlock mind moon morning mountains multitude Negroes neighbours never night ocean passed peace poor reader recollected rest Rodeur Scarborough seemed seen side slave-trade slaves sleep soon soul South Africa spirit stand strangers thing thor thought thousand tide tion truth ture turned vessel voice walked walls wilderness words