Story of Jack Halyard, the Sailor Boy, Or The Virtuous Family: Designed for American Children in Families and SchoolsU. Hunt, 1834 - Всего страниц: 20 |
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Стр. iv
... give her consent - Jack's examina- tion at the counting room - dialogue with Mr. Asper- parting of the mother and son at the Battery , when he set out to cross the ocean - 103 CHAPTER XI . - New notions of Mary and Betsey about city ...
... give her consent - Jack's examina- tion at the counting room - dialogue with Mr. Asper- parting of the mother and son at the Battery , when he set out to cross the ocean - 103 CHAPTER XI . - New notions of Mary and Betsey about city ...
Стр. vii
... give their sanction to the most worthless compilations or impudent plagiarisms , even without looking at them , rather than to give offence by a refusal . To such an extent has this abuse been carried , that a large portion of the ...
... give their sanction to the most worthless compilations or impudent plagiarisms , even without looking at them , rather than to give offence by a refusal . To such an extent has this abuse been carried , that a large portion of the ...
Стр. xvi
... gives him his just rank in the moral scale of being ; to draw the neglect- ed poor , from ignorance and vice , to rational . freedom and happiness ; and raise the undying soul nearer to the fountain of wisdom whence it sprang ...
... gives him his just rank in the moral scale of being ; to draw the neglect- ed poor , from ignorance and vice , to rational . freedom and happiness ; and raise the undying soul nearer to the fountain of wisdom whence it sprang ...
Стр. 18
... give twelve spellings , and four contradictorv etymologies , for simiter , a falchion or short sword . As it must be admitted that it would be inconvenient in practice to follow all of these standards , the writer of this work has aimed ...
... give twelve spellings , and four contradictorv etymologies , for simiter , a falchion or short sword . As it must be admitted that it would be inconvenient in practice to follow all of these standards , the writer of this work has aimed ...
Стр. 42
... give the best half to a friend , than to eat the whole himself . He said one day , " If I should eat the whole of this fine nutmeg - melon , that would be the last of it : but if I give each one in the house a part , the pleasure will ...
... give the best half to a friend , than to eat the whole himself . He said one day , " If I should eat the whole of this fine nutmeg - melon , that would be the last of it : but if I give each one in the house a part , the pleasure will ...
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
acquaintance affectionate American appeared Asper Atlantic Ocean bad company Bardus blessings Briar Hill brother called Captain Mitchell Carthage CHAPTER child Circassia colt Constantinople dear delightful dollars earth Fair Trader farm father feelings friends Gibraltar grapes happy Harpagon Harriet heared heart Hellespont honor hope hundred Ishmael Jack Halyard Jack's kind knew lady Latin language Lawrence learning letter little fellow little girls live Liverpool look Major Wilson Malta Mary and Betsey miles mind morning mother Mount Etna neighbors never New-Jersey New-York night parents passed pet lamb Peter Wilson pleasant poor racter respect sailor Sanford scene seen Shepherd ship shore silly sisters Solomon Belmot soon Spanish dollars story Suwarrow tell Temple thee thing thought told took trees uncle wanted whole wish young
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Стр. 25 - Hey, diddle diddle, the cat and the fiddle, The cow jumped over the moon. The little dog laughed to see such sport, And the dish ran away with the spoon!
Стр. 40 - I spake as a child, I thought as a child, I understood as a child ; but when I became a man, I put away childish things.
Стр. 43 - ... time to store your minds with knowledge, and form your hearts to virtue. It is the condition of our being, that all which is most valuable is to be diligently sought. They who would win the prize, must exert themselves earnestly in the race, and not fall back, nor turn aside for small obstacles. Young men of America, can you be ignorant of the high duties to which you are called? Will you pass away the prime of your days in careless indolence, and cheat the hopes of your friends'?
Стр. 68 - God is kind, and knows the best. He will be your mother's protector ; he will be your father. While you are young, remember this great God. Never speak his name but with reverence. Strive to do his will. Remember that his eye is always upon you, and that no evil deed can be concealed from him. Think what he has done for me, and what he will do for all, who love and obey him. " Strive to improve your minds in every kind of useful knowledge. Behave with good order in your -\ school. Respect your teachers,...
Стр. ii - PERKINS, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. CONTENTS.
Стр. 69 - What your fortune is to be in the world, or whether your lives are to be spared, nobody can tell. I have but little to leave you, except a name unstained and a father's blessing. If you do well, these will be sufficient for you. If you are idle, and ignorant and vicious, all the riches in the world could not raise you to true respect.
Стр. 39 - Ay, there is the difficulty, my good fellow, who can change that bag of sand into a smart boy. ? Jack. I should hardly think that any young lad would be such a dolt, as not to try to make himself respectable in the world. Sol. You might as well teach a fish to eat grass in the fields, as to make any thing of that lazy fellow. Jack. We should be very careful, Solomon, about speaking evil of our neighbors. Good bye.
Стр. 67 - I have great reason to be thankful." ing, for he was very weak : and they gave him some drink in a glass to wet his mouth. The bright sun was just shining into the room. " So," said this good man, " the sun of my life is going down, and no rising sun will shine again on me, till the last morning shall beam on the world.
Стр. 190 - ... was he a constitutional Whig. What exactly his politics were, apart from religion, it is difficult to say. He looked at politics through the medium of his religion, and his first and last desire for England was that it should enjoy unshackled religious liberty. His ideal was the old Hebrew one, that every man should sit under his own vine and his own fig tree. For the party politics of the hour he had no taste whatever, and felt indifferent to the bearings of opinion on the interests of Whigs...
Стр. 39 - ... What were those two ? Solomon. One was, the horse was bad to catch. Jack. What was the other ? Solomon. When they had caught him he was good for nothing. Jack. I hope Isaac is not so bad as the horse you tell of; he will make a very decent man yet, if he will only try, in earnest. Solomon. Ay, there is the difficulty, my good fellow;—• who can change that bag of sand into a smart boy ? Jack. I should hardly think that any young lad would be such a dolt as not to try to make himself respectable...