Olla Podrida, Том 2Longman, Orme, Brown, Green, & Longmans, 1840 |
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Стр. 15
... obtain the whole house for 3001. The proprietor of the Paris house , therefore , receives much more by letting his floors separate than the English do . The com- mon articles of necessity are as dear , if not dearer abroad ; the octroi ...
... obtain the whole house for 3001. The proprietor of the Paris house , therefore , receives much more by letting his floors separate than the English do . The com- mon articles of necessity are as dear , if not dearer abroad ; the octroi ...
Стр. 20
... obtained by rote , and without thinking ; but from the elements of arithmetic up to Euclid and algebra , no boy can work his task without thinking . I never yet knew a man who was a good mathematician who was not well - informed upon ...
... obtained by rote , and without thinking ; but from the elements of arithmetic up to Euclid and algebra , no boy can work his task without thinking . I never yet knew a man who was a good mathematician who was not well - informed upon ...
Стр. 29
... obtain justice ; the detention of his pro- perty without just cause , all that he considers as law and justice in his own country , is over- ruled : he is obliged to submit to the greatest insults , or consent to the greatest imposition ...
... obtain justice ; the detention of his pro- perty without just cause , all that he considers as law and justice in his own country , is over- ruled : he is obliged to submit to the greatest insults , or consent to the greatest imposition ...
Стр. 39
... obtaining public preferment ; but , with the exception of Mignet and Mérimée- who are courted for their personal merits and official standing rather than for their literary distinctions I have scarcely met one of them . - To the parties ...
... obtaining public preferment ; but , with the exception of Mignet and Mérimée- who are courted for their personal merits and official standing rather than for their literary distinctions I have scarcely met one of them . - To the parties ...
Стр. 55
... obtained by our leading journals from all quarters of the globe . I have looked with astonishment and admiration at the working of the “ Times " newspaper by its beautiful steam - engine ; it is one of the most interesting sights that ...
... obtained by our leading journals from all quarters of the globe . I have looked with astonishment and admiration at the working of the “ Times " newspaper by its beautiful steam - engine ; it is one of the most interesting sights that ...
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Стр. 36 - Marthieu the shabby, dirty-looking lodgings where the — — — are economizing, in penance for the pleasure of one little year spent in this charming house. Poor people ! How they must long for England ! how they must miss the thousand trivial but essential conveniences devised here for the civilization of human life ! What an air of decency and respectfulness about the servants ! what a feeling of homeishness in a house exclusively our own ! The modes of life may be easier on the continent, —...
Стр. 26 - What, then, I would fain discover, constitutes the peculiar merit of inducing persons uninstigated by motives of economy, to fix themselves in this comfortless and filthy city, and call it Paradise ? Alas ! my solution of the problem is far from honourable to the taste of our absentees ! In Paris people are far less amenable than in London to the tribunal of public opinion...
Стр. 6 - ... ready to be blasted when visitors came, the bell was rung instead, and, for a few times, answered the same purpose. The thrush flew down close to where they stood, but she perceived that she was trifled with, and it interfered with her process of incubation ; the consequence was, that afterwards, when the bell was rung, she would peep over the ledge to ascertain if the workmen did retreat, and, if they did not, she would remain where she was, probably saying to herself, " No, no, gentlemen ;...
Стр. 10 - To lie in cold obstruction, and to rot ; This sensible warm motion to become A kneaded clod ; and the delighted spirit To bathe in fiery floods, or to reside In thrilling regions of thick-ribbed ice; To be imprisoned in the viewless winds, And blown with restless violence about The pendent world...
Стр. 24 - Paris, at least thirty take place chez nous. Society is established with us on a wider and more splendid scale. The weekly soirees, on the other hand, which properly represent the society of this place, are dull, meagre, and formal to the last degree of formality. There is no brilliant point...
Стр. 39 - Merimee — who are courted for their personal merits and official standing rather than for their literary distinctions — I have scarcely met one of them. To the parties of the ministers of the Grand Referendaire, and other public functionaries, artists and men of letters are admitted as part of a political system ; but they are not to be found — like Moore, Rogers, Chantrey, Newton, and others — in the boudoirs of the elite, or the select fetes of a Devonshire House. " The calling of ' un...
Стр. 57 - One month is no sooner corrected and printed, than on comes another. It is the stone of Sisyphus — an endless repetition of toil — a constant weight upon the mind — a continual wearing upon the intellect and spirits, demanding all the exertion of your faculties, at the same time you are compelled to do the severest drudgery.
Стр. 206 - Do the faults of these people arise from the peculiarity of their constitutions, or from the nature of their government? To ascertain this, one must compare them with those who live under similar institutions. I must go to America — that is decided.
Стр. 57 - It is the stone of Sisyphus — an endless repetition of toil — a constant weight upon the mind — a continual wearing upon the intellect and spirits, demanding all the exertion of your faculties, at the same time that you are compelled to do the severest drudgery. To write for a magazine is very well, but to edit one is to condemn yourself to slavery.
Стр. 24 - A few ministerial fStes every winter may perhaps exceed in brilliancy the balls given in our common routine of things ; but for one entertainment in Paris, at least thirty take place chez nous. Society is established with us on a wider and more splendid scale.