The Atlantic Souvenir: A Christmas and New Year's Offering. 1826-1832H.C. Carey & I. Lea, 1830 - Gift books |
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Page 33
... heard there save Ralph's and Alice's voices , mingling in soft and sup- pressed murmurs , as if afraid of breaking the chain of their aunt's ideas , or , perchance , of too rudely jarring a tenderer chain . One evening , after tea , Mrs ...
... heard there save Ralph's and Alice's voices , mingling in soft and sup- pressed murmurs , as if afraid of breaking the chain of their aunt's ideas , or , perchance , of too rudely jarring a tenderer chain . One evening , after tea , Mrs ...
Page 56
... heard his answering halloo far below , and with Carlo as a pilot , but not without difficulty , reached the spot where he stood . He seemed much elated by some discovery , and point- ed , with evident exultation , to a wide fissure ...
... heard his answering halloo far below , and with Carlo as a pilot , but not without difficulty , reached the spot where he stood . He seemed much elated by some discovery , and point- ed , with evident exultation , to a wide fissure ...
Page 74
... heard To break , except in music , on the ear . I watch'd its gentle current struggling through Green fields that bore the tender buds of spring ; The violet and water - lily shed Their sweetest perfumes ; all created things Look'd fair ...
... heard To break , except in music , on the ear . I watch'd its gentle current struggling through Green fields that bore the tender buds of spring ; The violet and water - lily shed Their sweetest perfumes ; all created things Look'd fair ...
Page 104
... heard his loud clear halloo , and the next instant partridge and hawk reappeared in rapid succession ; but the poor bird was now both tired and frightened , and , probably from the latter cause , flew directly towards Mary and Suffolk ...
... heard his loud clear halloo , and the next instant partridge and hawk reappeared in rapid succession ; but the poor bird was now both tired and frightened , and , probably from the latter cause , flew directly towards Mary and Suffolk ...
Page 106
... heard steps rapidly approaching , and , looking up , the king a second time stood beside him . His countenance was entirely changed ; the smile he had worn but a few moments previous had vanished ; and a heavy frown rested upon his brow ...
... heard steps rapidly approaching , and , looking up , the king a second time stood beside him . His countenance was entirely changed ; the smile he had worn but a few moments previous had vanished ; and a heavy frown rested upon his brow ...
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Common terms and phrases
Alama Algesiras Alice appeared arms aunt beautiful Billy Morgan bird blood bosom breath breeze bright brow Canajoharie captain castle cheek Cherry Valley cloud cottage Courland Creance dark daugh deep door duke earth Engraved falcon father fear fire flowers forest friends frigate gaze girl hand happy hawk head heard heart heaven Henry Richter hills hope house of Valois Indians Iola Johnson lady Laroque light lips lived look lord Luitgardis Mary messmate mind Morley mother Natchez never night o'er Otsego lake passed Pow-wow Ralph Ralph Hepburn round sailors savage scene seemed shade silent sir William Johnson sister smile song soon soul spirit stood Suffolk Suliot swell tears thee thing thou art thought tion Tom Brown trees uncon village visions of delight voice warriors wave whisper wild wind wing wonder Xalissa young youth
Popular passages
Page 258 - It rests with me to wind my horn — Thou art with numbers overborne ; It rests with me, here, brand to brand, Worn as thou art, to bid thee stand : But...
Page 193 - Both warbling of one~song, both in one key; As if our hands, our sides, voices, and minds, Had been incorporate. So we grew together, Like to a double cherry, seeming parted ; Hut yet a union in partition, — Two lovely berries moulded on one stem : So, with two seeming bodies, but one heart ; Two of the first, like coats in heraldry, Due but to one, and crowned with one crest.
Page 224 - Indians were entitled to the credit of fighting manfully. Every rock, and tree, and bush shielded its man, from behind which the winged messengers of death were thickly sent, but with so little effect as to excite astonishment. The Indians yielded ground only inch by inch ; and in their retreat darted from tree to tree with...
Page 284 - Morley ; no, nor inconstant, nor fickle," she added, reading the expression that was arising on Morley 's countenance. " That I love, and in that love am incapable of change, do not, Morley, insult me by doubting, even by a look. But O, if you love me as you ought, as you have sworn you do, as a man of honour, I implore you to take me back to my father
Page 15 - Among the nations doom'd to stand; Proud, like her mighty mountain woods; Like her own rivers, wandering free; And sending forth from hills and floods, The joyous shout of liberty! Like thee, majestic bird! like thee. She stands in un bought majesty, With spreadmg wing, untired and strong, That dares a soaring far and long, That mounts aloft, nor looks below, And will not quail though tempests blow...
Page 14 - With a dark fury naught can stop, And wings his wild, unearthly way Far through the clouded realms of day. Bird of the sun ! to thee — to thee The earliest tints of dawn are known, And 'tis thy proud delight to see The monarch...
Page 41 - THE birds, when winter shades the sky, Fly o'er the seas away, Where laughing isles in sunshine lie, And summer breezes play; And thus the friends that flutter near While fortune's sun is warm, Arc startled if a cloud appear, And fly before the storm. But when from winter's howling plains Each other warbler 's past, The little snow-bird still remains, And chirrups midst the blast.
Page 86 - How cheap Is genuine happiness, and yet how dearly Do we all pay for its base counterfeit ! We fancy wants, which to supply, we dare Danger and death, enduring the privation Of all free nature offers in her bounty, To attain that, which, in its full fruition, Brings but satiety. The poorest man May taste of nature in her elements, Pure, wholesome, never cloying : while the richest, From the same stores, does but elaborate A pungent dish of well concocted poison.
Page 215 - ... latter stream, towards the heart of the Indian country. The extensive, and not very rapid preparations for this expedition, could not, of course, be kept a secret from the wily Indians ; and Brandt, the Butlers, and Guy Johnson, with fifteen hundred Indians and five companies of whites, chiefly tories, made corresponding exertions to meet it. Indeed it was soon ascertained by Sullivan, that they had boldly determined to risk a general battle, for which preparations were made upon a well selected...