The Puritan and His DaughterBaker and Scribner, 1849 - Всего страниц: 495 |
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Стр. 22
... magistrate who knew but one law , to wit , the will of his superiors , and held himself bound to carry it into effect without discrimination , though in so doing he outraged every principle of justice . He listened with dignified ...
... magistrate who knew but one law , to wit , the will of his superiors , and held himself bound to carry it into effect without discrimination , though in so doing he outraged every principle of justice . He listened with dignified ...
Стр. 23
... magistrate ” — " Slife , whom do you call sir magistrate ? I am no knight , that you should thus dub me ; and what do you mean by addressing me with , let me tell you , ' as it were in defiance ? Let me tell you , sir , that I re ...
... magistrate ” — " Slife , whom do you call sir magistrate ? I am no knight , that you should thus dub me ; and what do you mean by addressing me with , let me tell you , ' as it were in defiance ? Let me tell you , sir , that I re ...
Стр. 157
... magistrate , and it is my duty to see the laws executed , most especially those necessary to the safety of life and property . Among these is one which makes it incumbent on every male member of the community , not disqualified by age ...
... magistrate , and it is my duty to see the laws executed , most especially those necessary to the safety of life and property . Among these is one which makes it incumbent on every male member of the community , not disqualified by age ...
Стр. vi
... Magistrate — Is Fined and Adopts an Im- portant Resolution - Soliloquy of the Justice , which Begins very sensibly , but Ends in Nothing . : 96 PAGE CHAPTER IX . Unaccountably Perverse Conduct of Miriam - vi CONTENTS .
... Magistrate — Is Fined and Adopts an Im- portant Resolution - Soliloquy of the Justice , which Begins very sensibly , but Ends in Nothing . : 96 PAGE CHAPTER IX . Unaccountably Perverse Conduct of Miriam - vi CONTENTS .
Стр. viii
... Magistrates and Committed to Prison on the Evidence of Old Cat - Visit of Condolence by Tobias Harpsfield and its Consequences - Trial and Condemnation on the Testimony of the Devil . CHAPTER XVIII . . 179 . 190 . 199 The Self ...
... Magistrates and Committed to Prison on the Evidence of Old Cat - Visit of Condolence by Tobias Harpsfield and its Consequences - Trial and Condemnation on the Testimony of the Devil . CHAPTER XVIII . . 179 . 190 . 199 The Self ...
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answered arms Baneswright battle of Naseby became become better blood called CHAPTER church Connecticut River conscience Crop-ear danger daugh daughter dead dear death duty exclaimed eyes faith father fear feelings friends gentle gentleman Gregory Moth hand Harold Habingdon head heart Heaven hope hour Indian inflicted innocent Israel Justice King Langley Tyringham least length live look magistrate Majesty Master Gregory Master Langley Master Tyringham melancholy Mildred mind mint julep Miriam Habingdon Mistress Tyringham mother nature Naumkeag neighbor never night occasion old Cavalier Oliver Cromwell once passed persecution pious Puritans quoth rats won't reader recollections river Roundhead savages scene seemed silence Slife smiling banks smoke soon sorrow spirit suffered Susan tell thee thou hast thought tion Tobias Harpsfield truth uncon voice wife wild wild boar wilderness wise old wish witchcraft woman word young
Популярные отрывки
Стр. 27 - At Christ- church marriage, done before the king, Lest that those mates should want an offering, The king himself did offer;— What, I pray ? He offered twice or thrice — to go away !" . A CONTRIVANCE IN DRAMATIC DIALOGUE.
Стр. 81 - ... Protector, who loved a good voice and instrumental music well. He heard him sing with very great delight, liquored him with sack, and in conclusion said, ' Mr. Quin, you have done very well, what shall I do for you ? ' To which Quin made answer with great compliments, of which he had command with a great grace, that ' your Highness would be pleased to restore me to my student's place ; ' which he did, accordingly, and so kept it to his dying day.
Стр. 72 - Come, my boys, my brave boys, let us pray heartily and fight heartily. I will run the same fortunes and hazards with you. Remember, the cause is for God, and for the defence of yourselves, your wives, and children. Come, my honest brave boys, pray heartily and fight heartily, and God will bless us.
Стр. 207 - The boar's head in hand bear I, Bedeck'd with bays and rosemary ; And I pray you, my masters, be merry, Quot estis in convivio. Caput apri defero Reddens laudes Domino.
Стр. 26 - But it being too grave for the King and too scholastic for the auditory (or as some have said, that the actors had taken too much wine before they began), his Majesty (James I.), after two acts, offered several times to withdraw.
Стр. 111 - ... and more proper than any of the Scholars in the Univerfity : and that he would make a boy of twelve years of age to preach as good Divinity as moft of them. But their praying and preaching was altogether contrary to the genii of the Academians :" " for they made wry mouths, fquint eyes, and fcru'd faces, quite altering them from what God and nature had made them. They had an tick behaviours, fqueaking voices, and puling tones, fit rather for ftage Players, and country Beggars to ufe, than fuch...
Стр. 196 - I possess the two minerals shade into each other so completely that it is impossible to tell where one begins and the other ends.
Стр. 27 - the place where the Lord would create a new heaven and a new earth, new churches and a new commonwealth.
Стр. 258 - Herbert's — that which I did always love. (Kenna sings :) Sweet day, so calm, so clear, so bright, The bridal of the earth and sky! . Sweet dews shall weep thy fall to-night — For thou must die.
Стр. 176 - ... having occasion to pronounce the play "a very conceited, scurvy one, " looks behind the arras "lest the poet hear me or his man, Master Brome. " This was in 1614. Prefixed to Brome's Northern Lasse, and dated, therefore, not later than 1632, we have Jonson's characteristic sonnet "to my old faithful servant and by his continued virtue my loving friend . . . Mr. Richard Brome.
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The Puritan Settler in the American Novel Before the Civil War Adelheid Staehelin-Wackernagel Просмотр фрагмента - 1961 |
The Goodly Word: The Puritan Influence in American Literature from Jonathan ... Ellwood Johnson Ограниченный просмотр - 2005 |