My Diary in America in the Midst of War, Volumul 1Tinsley brothers, 1865 - 434 pagini |
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Pagina 19
... carried off ; the whole cities and villages that have been de- stroyed ; of women ravished , children maltreated , aged people turned out of doors , churches gutted , negroes stolen , and smiling farms laid waste . The consideration of ...
... carried off ; the whole cities and villages that have been de- stroyed ; of women ravished , children maltreated , aged people turned out of doors , churches gutted , negroes stolen , and smiling farms laid waste . The consideration of ...
Pagina 50
... carried on for the liberation of the oppressed and enslaved African ; and because we believe that the real object of the war is to obtain domination over the South , and that you would throw the negro overboard to - morrow if you could ...
... carried on for the liberation of the oppressed and enslaved African ; and because we believe that the real object of the war is to obtain domination over the South , and that you would throw the negro overboard to - morrow if you could ...
Pagina 61
... carrying home exhausted wantons on his back , and to entertaining in his house blind women and starved - out apothecaries , and lived to write the " Lives of the Poets " and moderation in eating and a me , at the time NEW YORK . 61.
... carrying home exhausted wantons on his back , and to entertaining in his house blind women and starved - out apothecaries , and lived to write the " Lives of the Poets " and moderation in eating and a me , at the time NEW YORK . 61.
Pagina 73
... carrying his country about with him in his countenance and on his tongue , but this I am led to believe now is not the case . The Americans are quite as surly to their own compatriots as to foreigners - unless they are intro- duced to ...
... carrying his country about with him in his countenance and on his tongue , but this I am led to believe now is not the case . The Americans are quite as surly to their own compatriots as to foreigners - unless they are intro- duced to ...
Pagina 98
... carried " the flag " in their ears , and that the Wall - street brokers wore the flag " in their button - holes . In a Penitentiary School at Deer Island , Boston , passing through one of the class - rooms , I saw that the teacher had ...
... carried " the flag " in their ears , and that the Wall - street brokers wore the flag " in their button - holes . In a Penitentiary School at Deer Island , Boston , passing through one of the class - rooms , I saw that the teacher had ...
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My Diary in America in the Midst of War; 2 George Augustus 1828-1895 Sala Nu există previzualizare disponibilă - 2021 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
Abraham Lincoln American Arguelles army asked Astor House boots Boston Brandy Station Brevoort Brevoort House bridge British Broadway called camp Canada carriage cents Christmas civilisation Colonel colour Confederate cousins dollars dress England English eyes Falls Federal fifty flag Fort Lafayette Fourth of July gentleman Government grand greenbacks Hall hand head head-quarters hear heard honour horse House hundred Irish kind look manner ment miles Montreal morning Myers negro never newspaper Niagara night North officers once passed patriotism perhaps persons political portmanteaus Potomac pretty railway river Rouse's Point Sachem scarcely Schenectady seen side Sol Davis soldiers Star-spangled Banner Street table d'hôte Tammany Tammany Hall thing thousand tion told town traveller turned Union United Vermont Virginia Washington whisky worms Yankee York young lady Zouaves
Pasaje populare
Pagina 365 - is a very abject and idiotic little bird found in New England. He is to the feathered what the " Scallywag " is to the finny creation. Occasionally when he is caught the housewives will condescend to put him into pies, but in general he is contemned, and " left out in the cold." He is weak on the wing, and weaker on his legs ; and when the miserable little object alights on earth, he is given to staggering about in an imbecile and helpless manner, suggesting the idea of extreme intoxication. The...
Pagina 33 - Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord; He is trampling out the vintage where the grapes of wrath are stored; He hath loosed the fateful lightning of His terrible, swift sword. His truth is marching on.
Pagina 33 - ... He has sounded forth the trumpet that shall never call retreat; He is sifting out the hearts of men before His judgment seat : Oh ! be swift, my soul, to answer Him ! be jubilant, my feet ! Our God is marching on. In the beauty of the lilies Christ was born across the sea, With a glory in His bosom that transfigures you and me : As He died to make men holy, let us die to make men free, While God is marching on.
Pagina 86 - I venture to prophesy that within six months you will come to consult me whether or not — for there is a great deal to be said on both sides of the question — you can make up your mind to sacrifice your own wishes and marry Walter Lester.
Pagina 141 - The ice was here, the ice was there, The ice was all around: It cracked and growled, and roared and howled, Like noises in a swound...
Pagina 46 - ... fancy-dress ball as the devil had as tail an eel in an umbrella case. Uncle , reproved by some one for want of consideration for his mother : " How can you behave so to the mother that bore you ? " replied " The mother that bores me, you mean." Judge to convicted prisoner : " The Almighty has given you health and strength, instead of which you go about the country stealing hens.
Pagina 89 - I knew an old lady in Liverpool once, who kept an alehouse, not for profit, for she had plenty of money, but in order to enjoy the conversation of a select few. For all bar there was her little front parlour, and, but for a beer-engine in one corner, and a row of bottles and glasses on a shelf, you might have imagined the room to be a boudoir. A stranger, say, would enter, and call for a " gill o' ale " in a tone which, somehow, displeased the old lady.
Pagina 366 - in this connection," of Mr. Macready, the actor. Once when the great tragedian was starring at Boston, at the Howard Athenaeum I think, there happened to be in the stalls a gentleman who, like Roger the Monk, had got
Pagina 381 - War in Spain is much less of an evil than in other countries. There is no property to destroy. Enter a house, the walls are bare ; there is no furniture. , when at our headquarters in Spain, wished to see an army, and I gave directions that he should be conducted through ours. When he returned, he said, " I have seen nothing—nothing but here and there little clusters of men in confusion ; some cooking, some washing, and some sleeping." Then you have seen an army,
Pagina 175 - The white houses and belvedere started up against the blue, like the mosques and minarets of Stamboul, and, soaring high behind the bow, was the great pillar of spray, glancing and flashing like an obelisk of diamonds — and it was then I began, as many men have begun perchance, to wonder at and to love Niagara.