Anglo-American Literature and MannersC. Scribner, 1852 - 312 pages |
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Page 28
... exist from 1830 to 1818 , a mixed government , slightly aristocratic , very favorable to industry , giving but little latitude to the personal wishes of the Sovereign , en- suring extended supervision to the deliberative chambers , and ...
... exist from 1830 to 1818 , a mixed government , slightly aristocratic , very favorable to industry , giving but little latitude to the personal wishes of the Sovereign , en- suring extended supervision to the deliberative chambers , and ...
Page 40
... exist ; brick houses re- place the verdure ; the mason has chased away the gardener ; a rail - road has destroyed even the fresh grots of Hoboken . " What Irving has of inmost and truest , comes from these al- most Dutch souvenirs of ...
... exist ; brick houses re- place the verdure ; the mason has chased away the gardener ; a rail - road has destroyed even the fresh grots of Hoboken . " What Irving has of inmost and truest , comes from these al- most Dutch souvenirs of ...
Page 50
... exists in its majesty . The child of the wilderness rises and paints himself before you . IIc has . neither ornaments nor dress . He is alone , apart , a stranger to all civilization ; master of all around him , recognizing no master ...
... exists in its majesty . The child of the wilderness rises and paints himself before you . IIc has . neither ornaments nor dress . He is alone , apart , a stranger to all civilization ; master of all around him , recognizing no master ...
Page 71
... exist ; when I reflect that all this grand portion of our Union , instead of being in a state of nature , is now nore or less covered with villages , farms , and towns , where the din of hammers and machinery is constantly heard ; that ...
... exist ; when I reflect that all this grand portion of our Union , instead of being in a state of nature , is now nore or less covered with villages , farms , and towns , where the din of hammers and machinery is constantly heard ; that ...
Page 91
... again the same coremonies are gone through . No fightings occur , jealousies seem to exist among these beaux , until a marked no preference is shown to some individual , when the rejected LITERATURE AND ELOQUENCE . 91.
... again the same coremonies are gone through . No fightings occur , jealousies seem to exist among these beaux , until a marked no preference is shown to some individual , when the rejected LITERATURE AND ELOQUENCE . 91.
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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 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 live Longfellow 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 shores singular 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