Anglo-American Literature and Manners, etc. [Translated by Donald Macleod.]Charles Scribner, 1852 - 312 pages |
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Page 11
... never exposed himself rashly ; never went to meet danger ; but when there was necessity , urgency , duty , he halted , showed a calm face and braved the peril ; it is one of the finest qualities of the American character . His speeches ...
... never exposed himself rashly ; never went to meet danger ; but when there was necessity , urgency , duty , he halted , showed a calm face and braved the peril ; it is one of the finest qualities of the American character . His speeches ...
Page 12
... never been obliged to fight against fortune , nourished more epicurean tastes , and resigned himself more easily to the brilliant and conversational idleness of great cities . He had also some good old habitual sins , gastronomy , for ...
... never been obliged to fight against fortune , nourished more epicurean tastes , and resigned himself more easily to the brilliant and conversational idleness of great cities . He had also some good old habitual sins , gastronomy , for ...
Page 13
... never has the French Revolution been judged by so impartial a witness , by a man come from the other world to assist at this great drama , by an American , a member of the Congress where Washington and Franklin sate . Democrat by fact ...
... never has the French Revolution been judged by so impartial a witness , by a man come from the other world to assist at this great drama , by an American , a member of the Congress where Washington and Franklin sate . Democrat by fact ...
Page 15
... never agree with those of his friend M. de Lafayette . The first time that this celebrated name appears in his journal , he says " Lafayette is too full of politics ; he appears to be too republican for the genius of his country . " It ...
... never agree with those of his friend M. de Lafayette . The first time that this celebrated name appears in his journal , he says " Lafayette is too full of politics ; he appears to be too republican for the genius of his country . " It ...
Page 18
... never hid his pity for an aristocracy which had flourished so long and which was so suddenly uprooted . Therefore all doors were opened to him , those of the boiling revolutionary clubs , those of the hotels where the trembling relics ...
... never hid his pity for an aristocracy which had flourished so long and which was so suddenly uprooted . Therefore all doors were opened to him , those of the boiling revolutionary clubs , those of the hotels where the trembling relics ...
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Acadian admirable Ahab American Anglo-Saxon Astorian expedition Audubon beautiful become birds Blue Laws Bougainville called Calvinist charming civilization clever colonies colonists coloring Cooper democratic Dickens Dominora elements England English Europe eyes father feeble force forests France Franklin French friends genius give Herman Melville human idea imagination Increase Mather Indian industry interest Irving Jonathan Sharp king labor land laws liberty literature lives look Louis XIV Madame de Staël manners Mardi Melville mind mingled minister Miss Martineau moral Morris nation nature never North America Omoo passion pleasure poet political Puritan race reader republic republican Revolution romance Sam Slick savage says scenes sentiment shores singular slave Slick society solitudes soon soul sovereign-kings speak spirit strange tell thing thought tion travellers trees Tyrone Power United Washington Washington Irving whigs wild woman women words writers young