The Rainbow: Originally Published in the Richmond Enquirer. First seriesRitchie & Worsley, 1804 - 72 Seiten |
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Seite 16
... arts and science , so much of our pleasure depends upon the urbanity and good breeding of our com- panions , that no hint should be disregarded , which may , in the remotest degree improve our manners or refine our tastes . Some men ...
... arts and science , so much of our pleasure depends upon the urbanity and good breeding of our com- panions , that no hint should be disregarded , which may , in the remotest degree improve our manners or refine our tastes . Some men ...
Seite 41
... arts and sciences in any gi- ven time . The same causes must always produce the same effects . If the American genius had been equal to the Eu- ropean , it ought in the same lapse of years to have explor- ed as many sciences , invented ...
... arts and sciences in any gi- ven time . The same causes must always produce the same effects . If the American genius had been equal to the Eu- ropean , it ought in the same lapse of years to have explor- ed as many sciences , invented ...
Seite 43
... arts of the mother country , which were indeed very inconsiderable in themselves , but highly important , as I have already shewn , as they related to the future progress of their possessors . We know but lit- tle of Phoenicia , or ...
... arts of the mother country , which were indeed very inconsiderable in themselves , but highly important , as I have already shewn , as they related to the future progress of their possessors . We know but lit- tle of Phoenicia , or ...
Seite 44
... arts which embellish life , as well as in those which minister to the wants of men . The Arcadian scenes of rural life may be the residence of peace , simplici- ty , innocence and happiness ; but it is in the collision of towns , that ...
... arts which embellish life , as well as in those which minister to the wants of men . The Arcadian scenes of rural life may be the residence of peace , simplici- ty , innocence and happiness ; but it is in the collision of towns , that ...
Seite 56
... , and did not return her to her mother , until he and his friend Proteus had amused themselves with teaching her some of the arts by which they had been accustomed to impose upon mankind . The im- 56 No. 8 . THE RAINBOW .
... , and did not return her to her mother , until he and his friend Proteus had amused themselves with teaching her some of the arts by which they had been accustomed to impose upon mankind . The im- 56 No. 8 . THE RAINBOW .
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The Rainbow: Originally Published in the Richmond Enquirer William Wirt Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2016 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acquired admiration advantages America amuse ancient appears arts attained attention beauty birth Bonaparte bosom causes character civilized correct degree delight despotism earth endeavoured enjoy enlightened enquiry equal established Europe extensive father feel female feudal feudal system France French revolution friend of humanity genius Greece happiness heart houses human husband ideas ignorance illusion of fancy imagination improvement individuals indulge influence inhabitants intellectual justice king labour laws legion of honor lettres de cachet liberty limited monarchy literary literature Louis XVI mankind manners marriage ment mind miscellaneous essays moral nation nature ness never nobility object observed opinion peasant perceived person philosopher pleasure political portion portunities possess present principles propriety Rainbow representative democracy republican respect seisin sense sentiment shew society streets talents tender tion tism towns Truth and Eloquence usurpation vate veneration Virginia virtuous women
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 37 - For, besides the scutages to which they were liable in defect of personal attendance, which however were assessed by themselves in parliament, they might be called upon by the king or lord paramount for aids, whenever his eldest son was to be knighted, or his eldest daughter married ; not to forget the ransom of his own person. The heir, on the death of his ancestor, if of full age, was plundered of the first emoluments arising from his inheritance, by way of relief and primer seisin ; and, if under...
Seite 37 - Smith very feelingly complains, " when he came to his own, after he was out of wardship, his woods decayed, houses fallen down, stock wasted and gone, lands let forth and ploughed to be barren...
Seite 37 - ... to reduce him still further, he was yet to pay half a year's profits as a fine for suing out his livery ; and also the price or value of his marriage, if he refused such wife as his lord and guardian had bartered for, and imposed upon him ; or twice that value if he married another woman. Add to this, the untimely and expensive honour of knighthood, to make his poverty more completely splendid.
Seite 37 - In the mean time the families of all our nobility and gentry groaned under the intolerable burthens, which, in consequence of the fiction adopted after the conquest, were introduced and laid upon them by the subtlety and finesse of the Norman lawyers. For...
Seite 37 - Add to this the untimely and expensive honor of knighthood, to make his poverty more completely splendid. And when, by these deductions, his fortune was so shattered and ruined that perhaps he was obliged to sell his patrimony, he had not even that poor privilege allowed him without paying an exorbitant fine for a license of alienation...
Seite 13 - ... the heart of every beholder. I remember, Maria at her first appearance in the ball room. She was then about fourteen years of age. — The inquiry ran — " what rose-bud of beauty is this !" The epithet was applied with peculiar propriety : it depicted in one word, her youth, her beauty, her innocence and sweetness. She danced ; when light and etherial as a sylph, she surpassed whatever we have read of the wild, the striking, the captivating graces displayed by the rural beauties of the flowery...
Seite 13 - ... description of poets. //Their benevolent breasts were fraught with a tenderness of feeling whose luxury is known only to the poor and humble. The rich and the prosperous know it only by name.\\ Their simplicity, their benevolence, their sensibility, were concentrated in the bosom of the young MARIA. They gave an emphasis to her opening beauty— suffused her cheek with a richer hue— and rode, in triumph on the beams of her eyes, through the heart of every beholder. I remember MARIA at her first...
Seite 14 - How soon was the serene and joyous morning to be overcast! A lover presented himself. Like Maria, he was in the bloom of youth, and had every advantage of person and address; but his breast was not, like Maria's, the residence of pure and exalted virtue. He loved her indeed; or rather he was infatuated by her beauty; but he was incapable of forming a correct estimate of the treasure which was lodged in her bosom; of that heart whose purity, // delicacy, \\ fidelity//, generosity\\ and sensibility,...
Seite 38 - I cannot learn that ever this custom prevailed in England, though it certainly did in Scotland (under the name of mercheta or marcheta) , till abolished by Malcolm III.