Appletons' Journal, Volume 2

Couverture
D. Appleton and Company, 1877
 

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Expressions et termes fréquents

Fréquemment cités

Page 151 - Whose execution takes your enemy off ; Grapples you to the heart and love of us, Who wear our health but sickly in his life, Which in his death were perfect. 2 Mur. I am one, my liege, Whom the vile blows and buffets of the world Have so incensed, that I am reckless what I do, to spite the world.
Page 313 - If thou turn away thy foot from the sabbath, from doing thy pleasure on my holy day ; and call the sabbath a delight, the holy of the Lord, honourable ; and shalt honour him, not doing thine own ways, nor finding thine own pleasure, nor speaking thine own words : then shalt thou delight thyself in the Lord...
Page 142 - And soon his eyes had drunk her beauty up, Leaving no drop in the bewildering cup, And still the cup was full...
Page 315 - ... it be true that, in later times, it has been, in some measure, laid aside by the more ambitious and aspiring of the present generation, it is still recollected, even by them, as the familiar language of their childhood, and of those who were the earliest objects of their love and veneration. - It is connected, in their imagination, not only with that olden time which is uniformly conceived as more pure, lofty, and simple than the present, but also with all the soft and bright colours of remembered...
Page 145 - It ceased; yet still the sails made on A pleasant noise till noon, A noise like of a hidden brook, In the leafy month of June, That to the sleeping woods all night Singeth a quiet tune.
Page 139 - Sank in her pillow. Shaded was her dream By the dusk curtains : 'twas a midnight charm Impossible to melt as iced stream : The lustrous salvers in the moonlight gleam ; Broad golden fringe upon the carpet lies...
Page 155 - ... grievously whipped and burned through the gristle of the right ear with a hot iron of the compass of an inch about, as a manifestation of his wicked life, and due punishment received for the same.
Page 96 - Orange will perfect the deliverance so far advanced by him and will still preserve them from the violation of their rights which they have here asserted, and from all other attempts upon their religion, rights and liberties : II. The said lords spiritual and temporal, and commons assembled at Westminster, do resolve that William and Mary, Prince and Princess of Orange be, and be declared King and Queen of England...
Page 197 - Cherry-ripe, ripe, ripe, I cry, Full and fair ones ; come, and buy: If so be you ask me where They do grow ? I answer, there Where my Julia's lips do smile ;— There's the land, or cherry-isle ; Whose plantations fully show All the year where cherries grow.
Page 404 - And pumpkins neath the window used to climb ; And where I often when a child for hours Tried through the pales to get the tempting flowers, As lady's laces, everlasting peas, True-love-lies-bleeding, with the...

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