Essays on Various Subjects: Written for the Amusement of EverybodyJ. W. Bell, 1835 - 149 ページ |
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... pleasure wa- gon : and the same vehicle which his person adorns in a drive to Cato's , excites the admiration of the con- noiseurs on the road to Pine Brook . He lets his dogs run ; partly because he is unable to carry them in his toy ...
... pleasure wa- gon : and the same vehicle which his person adorns in a drive to Cato's , excites the admiration of the con- noiseurs on the road to Pine Brook . He lets his dogs run ; partly because he is unable to carry them in his toy ...
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... pleasure , is thus enabled to recruit his spirits , exhaust- ed by the fatiguing operations of the day's sport . Un- der the influence of brag and champaigne he boasts of the feats already performed , and binds himself to eclipse them ...
... pleasure , is thus enabled to recruit his spirits , exhaust- ed by the fatiguing operations of the day's sport . Un- der the influence of brag and champaigne he boasts of the feats already performed , and binds himself to eclipse them ...
39 ページ
... pleasure he Can find in catching with his hands a Frighten'd coney when trying to escape His tutor❜d vermin , I envy not his Taste , nor much admire the skill display'd in Such plebeian sport . For me , I love to Scale the hemlock ...
... pleasure he Can find in catching with his hands a Frighten'd coney when trying to escape His tutor❜d vermin , I envy not his Taste , nor much admire the skill display'd in Such plebeian sport . For me , I love to Scale the hemlock ...
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... pleasure ! I am not one of that class of men who make slaves of themselves for a few birds . It may do well enough for very young sportsmen ; who , before they are seasoned , will go out in the dark and come home in the dark too , in ...
... pleasure ! I am not one of that class of men who make slaves of themselves for a few birds . It may do well enough for very young sportsmen ; who , before they are seasoned , will go out in the dark and come home in the dark too , in ...
65 ページ
... critic whose heart is in his hand , and whose pen is governed in its movements by . the pulsations of that muscle , knows it to be false . There is more true pleasure both in reading and com- 7 * OH ! CRUEL ! A POEM . 65 Oh! Cruel!
... critic whose heart is in his hand , and whose pen is governed in its movements by . the pulsations of that muscle , knows it to be false . There is more true pleasure both in reading and com- 7 * OH ! CRUEL ! A POEM . 65 Oh! Cruel!
多く使われている語句
amusement animal appeared beautiful believe better bipeds bird boys Broadway called captain character circumstances coloured Columbite companion conse consider cooking countenance course dandy sportsman delightful devil discovered dollars doubloons dress excite excursion exhibit fashionable favourable feel fellow female fond fore frequently gentleman give ground hand Harlem head honour horse Hudson river hunter hunting Island Jersey shore killed kind laugh look master ment mind morning nature never night Nimrod observed opinion otter party passing person phrenology Pine Brook pleasure pointer pretty purpose quadruped quail racter ratus remark respecting right opposite Ruffed Grouse season seated seen shooting shot slothful snake snipe spaniels sport sure tell thing tion told took travelled true sportsman vagabond sportsman walking whole woodcock yellow fever young
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111 ページ - Tis pleasant, through the loopholes of retreat, To peep at such a world ; to see the stir Of the great Babel, and not feel the crowd ; To hear the roar she sends through all her gates At a safe distance, where the dying sound Falls a soft murmur on the uninjured ear.
65 ページ - Heaven derive their light. These born to judge, as well as those to write. Let such teach others who themselves excel, And censure freely who have written well.
71 ページ - I've seen, and sure I ought to know." So begs you'd pay a due submission, And acquiesce in his decision. Two travellers of such a cast, As o'er Arabia's wilds they...
1 ページ - Pan, take the lead." The vagabond sportsman belongs to a pretty numerous class of men, residing in the purlieus of large towns and cities ; although now and then he may be detected in the ranks of the dandy class, but never in that of the true sportsman. Take a sketch of two worthies belonging to this class purchasing a four dollar fowling piece, in the store of those well known caterers for the sporting world, Messrs.
69 ページ - Sing tura-la, tura-la, tura-lara ley. 0 cruel was th' engagement in which my true love fought, And cruel was the cannon-ball as knock'd his right eye out ; He used to ogle me, with peepers full of fun, But now he looks askew at me, because he's only one. Sing tura-la, &c.
115 ページ - ... and whose steps take hold on hell ;" "whose house inclineth unto death, and her paths unto the dead ; " whose " house is the way to hell, leading down to the chambers of death.
3 ページ - On the pigeon-ground he fires at a bird missed from the trap just as it ia falling from the gun of another out-shooter, and claims it with the ferocity of a savage, in the language of a blackguard : he also steals all the pigeons he can lay his hands on,- and pocket handkerchiefs become scarce among the company. Under these circumstances the vagabond sportsman seldom returns to town without a "mess ; " and not often without getting drunk. In this situation, at some low porter house, he swaggers loud...
67 ページ - OH! cruel were my parients as tore my love from me, And cruel was the Press Gang as took him off to sea, And cruel was the little boat as rowed him from the strand, And cruel was the big ship as sailed him from the land.
107 ページ - Vaughan's interpretation is the most refined interpretation possible for a reader who concentrates on Rousseau's political writings to the exclusion of his other work. It abounds in prescient hints; its portrait of Rousseau the moralist, of Rousseau's thought as a living, evolving organism...
48 ページ - ... you seldom go from home ; if you detect yourselves in boasting of the immense distance you can travel in a day (I mean not in a wagon, but on foot) in pursuit of game, when you know you seldom walk a mile — if you can recollect several instances in which you have failed to keep your appointments with...