American Monthly Knickerbocker, Volume 48Charles Fenno Hoffman, Lewis Gaylord Clark, Timothy Flint, Kinahan Cornwallis, John Holmes Agnew 1856 |
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Page 8
... lived in an Armenian family , who , with characteristic inhospitality , insisted that I should not spend the night under their roof , as in their peculiar godliness , they would not sleep with a heretic believing in the divinity of ...
... lived in an Armenian family , who , with characteristic inhospitality , insisted that I should not spend the night under their roof , as in their peculiar godliness , they would not sleep with a heretic believing in the divinity of ...
Page 17
... lived . The bloom of summer and the blight of autumn were followed by winter's pageant and its storm ; and like the snow - shroud to the flowers , was the dawn- VOL . XLVIII . 2 ing spring to my hopes . Trust had almost faded 1856. ] 17 ...
... lived . The bloom of summer and the blight of autumn were followed by winter's pageant and its storm ; and like the snow - shroud to the flowers , was the dawn- VOL . XLVIII . 2 ing spring to my hopes . Trust had almost faded 1856. ] 17 ...
Page 61
... lived . His songs became more frequent . In these later times another bird sings to him just in advance , and I am led on day by day , hour by hour , by the beckoning song of the companion - bird , and my soul keeps warm with the ...
... lived . His songs became more frequent . In these later times another bird sings to him just in advance , and I am led on day by day , hour by hour , by the beckoning song of the companion - bird , and my soul keeps warm with the ...
Page 77
... lived for their exe- cution , would have been a means of larger and more enduring influence than attends the most eminent official activity . The noble endeavors which he proposed to himself are partially disclosed in a letter addressed ...
... lived for their exe- cution , would have been a means of larger and more enduring influence than attends the most eminent official activity . The noble endeavors which he proposed to himself are partially disclosed in a letter addressed ...
Page 78
... lived more perfectly to justify the reverent admiration of his friends ! but Lycidas is dead , dead ere his prime , Young Lycidas , and hath not left his peer . There is no real nobility in human nature that had not illustration in his ...
... lived more perfectly to justify the reverent admiration of his friends ! but Lycidas is dead , dead ere his prime , Young Lycidas , and hath not left his peer . There is no real nobility in human nature that had not illustration in his ...
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Allah beautiful blue-fish boat Broadway Caliph called Champagne wine character clouds Dæmon dark dead dear death delight Derwiches dream earth EVERTON eyes face fair fancy father fear feeling feet flowers gentlemen give Gladman Golden Horn green hair hand happy head hear heard heart heaven Hinglish honor hope HORACE BINNEY horses knew ladies lake laugh light lips lived look Mary Lawson miles mind Miss morning Motherwort nature never New-York nigger night o'er Oakfields once Ottoman passed pleasant poor quiet reader replied rocks scene SCHOLIAST seemed Silistria smile soon sorrow soul spirit Standish sweet T. B. ALDRICH tell thee thing thou thought tion told Turkish Uncas voice walk waves wild wind wine woman words Wytles young