Mandeville: A Tale of the Seventeenth Century in England, 第 1 巻Archibald Constable and Company and Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, London, 1817 - 367 ページ |
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... effects might result from their being turned loose on the public , it was agreed with the Spanish minister , that they should immediately be re - enlisted for the service of his master . Sir Phelim and his fellow - conspirators were ...
... effects might result from their being turned loose on the public , it was agreed with the Spanish minister , that they should immediately be re - enlisted for the service of his master . Sir Phelim and his fellow - conspirators were ...
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... effect , it appeared necessary first to take in the intermediate garrison of Lisnegarvy . For this expedition he drew out four thou sand of the choicest troops from the my- riads that followed his standard . The at- tack was sustained ...
... effect , it appeared necessary first to take in the intermediate garrison of Lisnegarvy . For this expedition he drew out four thou sand of the choicest troops from the my- riads that followed his standard . The at- tack was sustained ...
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... of vapours , I had almost said steams , whose effect holds unmitigat- ed war with healthful animal life . The tide also threw up vast quantities of sargas- VOL . I. C sos and weeds , the corruption of which was supposed MANDEVILLE . 49.
... of vapours , I had almost said steams , whose effect holds unmitigat- ed war with healthful animal life . The tide also threw up vast quantities of sargas- VOL . I. C sos and weeds , the corruption of which was supposed MANDEVILLE . 49.
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... effect . For a great part of the year we were further involved in thick fogs and mists , to such a degree as often to render the use of candles necessary even at noon- day . The open country , which , as I have said , lay to the north ...
... effect . For a great part of the year we were further involved in thick fogs and mists , to such a degree as often to render the use of candles necessary even at noon- day . The open country , which , as I have said , lay to the north ...
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... effects of all this condescen- sion and consideration I have had for you . " Audley Mandeville , as I have already said , was one of the most timid and uncon- tending of human creatures , and of all per- sons MANDEVILLE . 67.
... effects of all this condescen- sion and consideration I have had for you . " Audley Mandeville , as I have already said , was one of the most timid and uncon- tending of human creatures , and of all per- sons MANDEVILLE . 67.
多く使われている語句
Amelia Anaxarchus apostacy Beaulieu beautiful blood bosom Bradford character Charlemont Charles child church church of Rome Clifford commodore countenance death degree delighted Dorothy earth existence express eyes father favour feelings felt garrison grace hand head heart heaven heir Henrietta honour House of Stuart human creature imagined impression inforced innocence Irish king knew lence lived looked Lord Caulfield Lord Montagu Mallison Mandeville House mansion marriage master ments mind Montagu nature ness never occasion once passed passion person pleasure poor possession preceptor Presbyterian present pride purpose quietism racter received recollection scarcely scene seemed sentiment sion Sir Phelim sister slave society sort soul species specta spirit stood Strafford stranger temper thing thou thought thousand tion tone Trophonius ture turn uncle uncle's utter Waller whole William the Conqueror Winchester College Winchester school words young youth
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221 ページ - That live according to her sober laws, And holy dictate of spare temperance : If every just man, that now pines with want, Had but a moderate and beseeming share Of that which lewdly-pampered luxury Now heaps upon some few with vast excess, Nature's full blessings would be well dispensed In unsuperfluous even proportion, And she no whit encumbered with her store...
112 ページ - And the beast which I saw was like unto a leopard, and his feet were as the feet of a bear, and his mouth as the mouth of a lion; and the dragon gave him his power, and his seat, and great authority.
248 ページ - Quite through the deeds of men : he loves no plays, As thou dost, Antony; he hears no music: Seldom he smiles; and smiles in such a sort As if he mocked himself, and .scorned his spirit That could be moved to smile at anything.
139 ページ - ... the very principles upon which society is built, and from the impatience our imperfect nature is too apt to conceive, of the imputed untowardness and absurd judgments, of those that are placed under our control. But let those of happier spirit know, that this imperious discipline is not the wholesome element of the expanding mind, and that the attempt to correct the mistaken judgments of the young by violent and summary dealing, can never be the true method of fostering a generous nature ; in...
107 ページ - It is now necessary that I should introduce my reader to a more intimate acquaintance with the reverend Hilkiah Bradford, the instructor of my youth. His figure was tall and emaciated ; his complexion was of a yellowish brown, without the least tincture of...
ii ページ - ... variety of figures, actions, and surprises. " But the nearer I looked at it, the more was I frightened at the task. Such a work must be made up of a variety of successive tales, having, for their main point of connexion, the impression which the events brought forward should produce upon my sleeping-waking principal personage. I should therefore have had at least a dozen times to set myself to the task of invention, as it were, de novo.
110 ページ - ... me that thou art a Christian !" The gloominess of my character might have made me an unpleasing or unpromising pupil to many instructors, but not so to the reverend Hilkiah. In the premature gravity of my features he read a vocation to the crown of martyrdom, if such should be the fortune of the Protestant church in our time as to demand of its faithful adherents the sealing their sincerity with their blood : and, as my tutor regarded light laughter, and merriment, and the frolics of youth, as...
139 ページ - I know there are nigged and brutal natures, who would interrupt me here, and cry out, that there is an easy remedy for all this. The boy whose thoughts are here described, was too much indulged ; an effusion of wholesome severity would soon have dispersed these clouds of the mind, and have caused him to know, that there was nothing but ground for congratulation, where he found so much occasion for complaint. And let these brutal natures go on in the exercise of their favourite discipline ! There...
161 ページ - I give thee charge in the sight of God, who quickeneth all things and before Jesus Christ, who before Pontius Pilate witnessed a good confession, that thou keep this commandment without spot, unrebukable, until the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ...
278 ページ - ... book much more than the casual attention of one perusal. To go into the details (and in these of course the chief merit consists) is beyond our limits, but we cannot refrain from presenting our readers with the first glimpse which comes upon Mandeville's own mind of the true nature of the result. " My nature would not permit me to hate the rabble, the mere chaff and refuse of the threshing-floor. Waller and Mallison came not near me. They might deport themselves as they would ; what was that...