The Quarterly Review, 139. kötetWilliam Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1875 |
Részletek a könyvből
1 - 5 találat összesen 66 találatból.
7. oldal
... effects , he knows how late in their season the fruits of policy ripen : - ... ' It must be left to Nature and Time to make that continuum , which was at first but contiguum . Those mixtures , which are at the first troubled , grow ...
... effects , he knows how late in their season the fruits of policy ripen : - ... ' It must be left to Nature and Time to make that continuum , which was at first but contiguum . Those mixtures , which are at the first troubled , grow ...
14. oldal
... effect , that he had the secret , and could touch the spring of a most nicely organised international combination . * In view of the war in progress and prospect , and in view of the whole future of British enterprise and commerce , the ...
... effect , that he had the secret , and could touch the spring of a most nicely organised international combination . * In view of the war in progress and prospect , and in view of the whole future of British enterprise and commerce , the ...
24. oldal
... effect of reading the fathers to meet Du Perron's incessant attacks .'- Pages 299–300 . Casaubon was writing an account not only of the present but of the future when he explains to Saumaise : Haec gens nihil minus est quam barbara ...
... effect of reading the fathers to meet Du Perron's incessant attacks .'- Pages 299–300 . Casaubon was writing an account not only of the present but of the future when he explains to Saumaise : Haec gens nihil minus est quam barbara ...
37. oldal
... effect the very same with those developed afterwards with such marvellous fortune by the rising French statesman with whom , in these his own last opera- tions , James was joining hands , Cardinal Richelieu . The two * One cannot be ...
... effect the very same with those developed afterwards with such marvellous fortune by the rising French statesman with whom , in these his own last opera- tions , James was joining hands , Cardinal Richelieu . The two * One cannot be ...
42. oldal
... effects of long peace and of steam had transformed us from insulars to cosmopolitans . When old Sam Johnson , on hearing of the death of a wealthy Jamaica planter , a friend of his own too , if we remember rightly , growled out that ...
... effects of long peace and of steam had transformed us from insulars to cosmopolitans . When old Sam Johnson , on hearing of the death of a wealthy Jamaica planter , a friend of his own too , if we remember rightly , growled out that ...
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Népszerű szakaszok
321. oldal - The Compleat Angler or the Contemplative Man's Recreation. Being a Discourse of Fish and Fishing, Not unworthy the perusal of most Anglers.
238. oldal - And here it is to be noted, that such Ornaments of the Church and of the Ministers thereof, at all Times of their Ministration, shall be retained, and be in use, as were in this Church of England, by the Authority of Parliament, in the Second Year of the Reign of King Edward the Sixth.
323. oldal - No life, my honest scholar, no life so happy and so pleasant as the life of a well-governed Angler ; for when the Lawyer is swallowed up with business, and the Statesman is preventing or contriving plots, then we sit on cowslip-banks, hear the birds sing, and possess ourselves in as much quietness as these silent silver streams, which we now see glide so quietly by us.
343. oldal - When genial Spring a living warmth bestows, And o'er the year her verdant mantle throws, No swelling inundation hides the grounds, But crystal currents glide within their bounds ; The finny brood their wonted haunts forsake, Float in the sun, and skim along the lake ; With frequent leap they range the shallow streams, Their silver coats reflect the dazzling beams : Now let the fisherman his toils prepare, And arm himself with every watery snare ; His hooks, his lines, peruse with careful eye, Increase...
330. oldal - Of recreation there is none So free as Fishing is alone; All other pastimes do no less Than mind and body both possess : My hand alone my work can do, So I can fish and study too.
228. oldal - Proud Prelate, — You know what you were before I made you what you are now. If you do not immediately comply with my request. I will unfrock you, by God.
324. oldal - Indeed, my good scholar, we may say of angling as Dr. Boteler said of strawberries, " Doubtless God could have made a better berry, but doubtless God never did ; " and so, if I might be judge, " God never did make a more calm, quiet, innocent recreation than angling.
23. oldal - For my name and memory, I leave it to men's charitable speeches, and to foreign nations, and to the next age.
344. oldal - Nor trowl for pikes, dispeoplers of the lake. Around the steel no tortur'd worm shall twine, No blood of living insect stain my line : Let me, less cruel, cast the feather'd hook With pliant rod athwart the pebbled brook, Silent along the mazy margin stray, And with the fur-wrought fly delude the prey.
307. oldal - ... ministers was appointed to reprove him for a behaviour so unbecoming a Covenanted monarch. The spokesman of the committee, one Douglas, began with a severe aspect, informed the king that great scandal had been given to the godly, enlarged on the heinous nature of sin, and concluded with exhorting his majesty, whenever he was disposed to amuse himself, to be more careful, for the future, in shutting the windows. This delicacy, so unusual to the place and to the character of the man, was remarked...