A faggot of French sticks, by the author of 'Bubbles from the brunnen of Nassau'. |
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1 - 5 találat összesen 7 találatból.
143. oldal
... parterre , " immediately in front of the cages of a quantity of wild beasts ; on my right was a stout wooden painted partition , about five feet high , above which , on benches slightly rising one above another , were seated those who ...
... parterre , " immediately in front of the cages of a quantity of wild beasts ; on my right was a stout wooden painted partition , about five feet high , above which , on benches slightly rising one above another , were seated those who ...
144. oldal
... parterre " to the cage , was certainly not without its effect , for the monkeys , as soon as it was over , sat for nearly a minute without indulging in a single frolic , until , one happening to give a jump over the back of a 144 ...
... parterre " to the cage , was certainly not without its effect , for the monkeys , as soon as it was over , sat for nearly a minute without indulging in a single frolic , until , one happening to give a jump over the back of a 144 ...
145. oldal
... parterre nearly half covered with spectators , the business of the evening com- menced by a young man , in a chanting tone , - in which a great deal of magnificent emphasis was almost invariably heaped upon the wrong words , giving to ...
... parterre nearly half covered with spectators , the business of the evening com- menced by a young man , in a chanting tone , - in which a great deal of magnificent emphasis was almost invariably heaped upon the wrong words , giving to ...
146. oldal
... parterre im- mediately hurried . After a pause of about half a minute I heard three loud startling taps at the back of the cage , as if there had been " a message from the Lords ; " then the drawing back of an iron bolt ; at last a ...
... parterre im- mediately hurried . After a pause of about half a minute I heard three loud startling taps at the back of the cage , as if there had been " a message from the Lords ; " then the drawing back of an iron bolt ; at last a ...
153. oldal
... parterre swarmed , and towards which the eyes of the rows of heads arranged in tiers one over another , were directed . As soon as the attend- ant had unscrewed the heavy chain just above the captive's foot , and which appeared to have ...
... parterre swarmed , and towards which the eyes of the rows of heads arranged in tiers one over another , were directed . As soon as the attend- ant had unscrewed the heavy chain just above the captive's foot , and which appeared to have ...
Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
accordingly Algeria animals appeared arms beard beautiful beneath bien blind blouses blue boys broad c'est carriages Champs Elysées chiffonnier clean colour commissionnaire concierge containing Cour d'Honneur crowd Denault door dressed England entered epaulettes establishment eyes face feet fête four France French front gentleman half hand head horses Hôtel des Invalides hour hyænas inscribed iron lady letters lofty London looking Louis Philippe Louis XVIII Madame magnificent ment minutes monkey Monsieur Mont de Piété mouth mustachios Napoleon observed ornamented palace of Versailles Paris parterre passed person police portmanteaus Post-office prefecture of police préfet de police proceeded rails replied round scarlet seated seen short shrug side silver soldiers soon sort sous stood street tion trowsers various walked walls whole wine wooden words yards young
Népszerű szakaszok
203. oldal - Oh, the roast beef of old England, And oh, the old English roast beef!
157. oldal - twas wild. But thou, O Hope, with eyes so fair, What was thy delighted measure? Still it whispered promised pleasure, And bade the lovely scenes at distance hail ! Still would her touch the strain prolong; And from the rocks, the woods, the vale, She...
158. oldal - And though sometimes, each dreary pause between, Dejected Pity at his side Her soul-subduing voice applied, Yet still he kept his wild unaltered mien, While each strained ball of sight seemed bursting from his head.
416. oldal - Appartements, which occupy the whole of the first floor of the central projecting building facing the garden ; the suite on the north belonged to the King, that on the south was the Queen's. The former present a striking contrast to the other suites of the palace ; they are large and...
380. oldal - ... other side of the street, in order to know when she would leave the street Madame went to the warehouse for novelties, Street (shrug), Number . From thence Madame got into a hackney carriage, which she stopped in the street on coming out of the warehouse. As for me, I ran as fast as my legs could carry me to follow the carriage. Madame got out of it in Street, say Number . Madame sent away the carriage, after having paid for it.
150. oldal - By the struggling moonbeam's misty light And the lantern dimly burning. No useless coffin enclosed his breast, Not in sheet nor in shroud we wound him ; But he lay like a warrior taking his rest, With his martial cloak around him.
124. oldal - ... nests of termites, hornets, and wasps ; specimens of the devastations effected in wood by different species of worms, and a numerous collection of shells, mollusks, zoophytes, echini, &c. The...
164. oldal - personne n'a le droit de tuer un cochon en Paris !"* Said I to myself, " How I wish that sentence were written in gold on our London Mansion House !" We now reached a long building, one story high, not at all unlike a set of hunting stables ; and on door No. 1 being opened, I saw before me a chamber ventilated like a brewhouse, with a window at each end, and paved with flag-stones, the further half of which was covered with a thick stratum of straw, as swoet.
1. oldal - In a close lane as I pursu'd my journey, I spy'da wrinkled hag, with age grown double, Picking dry sticks, and mumbling to herself.
127. oldal - Sec.; and the dead animals which the collection furnishes enrich the museum with valuable acquisitions. Cabinet of Comparative Anatomy. — For this collection, incomparably the richest in existence, the museum is indebted to the unwearied exertions of Baron Cuvier, by whom it was arranged, and under whose direction most of the objects were prepared. It is contained in a building to the west of the garden, near the Amphitheatre.