Douglas Jerrold's Shilling Magazine, Volumen2Douglas Jerrold Punch Office., 1845 |
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Página 97
... night's warm , the dog's loose , and with a mug or so of ale , I'm good to watch with any half - dozen of you . " The truth is , the barber had been visited by a second thought , that suggested to him the probability of rough usage at ...
... night's warm , the dog's loose , and with a mug or so of ale , I'm good to watch with any half - dozen of you . " The truth is , the barber had been visited by a second thought , that suggested to him the probability of rough usage at ...
Página 99
... night ; " to drive sleep from his eyeballs ; to make him feel a coward , a nobody , a nincompoop , in his own holland . Pleasant is it for the bitter - thinking man who sees a blustering authority — whether grasping a beadle's staff or ...
... night ; " to drive sleep from his eyeballs ; to make him feel a coward , a nobody , a nincompoop , in his own holland . Pleasant is it for the bitter - thinking man who sees a blustering authority — whether grasping a beadle's staff or ...
Página 110
... night , walked in the garden . How fresh and full of hope was all around her ; how the very heart of the earth seemed to beat with the new life of spring ! And she , who was made to sympathise with all that was beautiful - she , who was ...
... night , walked in the garden . How fresh and full of hope was all around her ; how the very heart of the earth seemed to beat with the new life of spring ! And she , who was made to sympathise with all that was beautiful - she , who was ...
Página 112
... night - dark wood , the cuckoo shouted . Ebenezer passed into the court - yard , and entered his silent house . In a few moments he stood beside the couch of the sleeping St. James . A terrible darkness fell upon the old man's face as ...
... night - dark wood , the cuckoo shouted . Ebenezer passed into the court - yard , and entered his silent house . In a few moments he stood beside the couch of the sleeping St. James . A terrible darkness fell upon the old man's face as ...
Página 118
... night ; and what's my reward , sir ? What , as parish doctor and midwife , is my consolation ? Why this , sir : that I ' ve helped to bring misery and want , and I don't know how many other sorts of vices into the world , when I might ...
... night ; and what's my reward , sir ? What , as parish doctor and midwife , is my consolation ? Why this , sir : that I ' ve helped to bring misery and want , and I don't know how many other sorts of vices into the world , when I might ...
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Página 261 - And busily gan for the soules pray Of them that gave him <25> wherewith to scholay* Of study took he moste care and heed. Not one word spake he more than was need; And that was said in form and reverence, And short and quick, and full of high sentence. Sounding in moral virtue was his speech, And gladly would he learn, and gladly teach.
Página 455 - History maketh a young man to be old, without either wrinkles or gray hairs; privileging him with the experience of age, without either the infirmities or inconveniences thereof.
Página 473 - I counted the perspiratory pores on the palm of the hand, and found 3,528 in a square inch. Now, each of these pores being the aperture of a little tube of about a quarter of an inch long, it follows that in a square inch of skin on the palm of the hand, there exists a length of tube equal to 882 inches, or 73£ feet.
Página 187 - The advantage of receiving the earliest intelligence, and of conveying their orders with celerity induced the emperors to establish, throughout their extensive dominions, the regular institution of posts. Houses were everywhere erected at the distance only of five or six miles; each of them was constantly provided with forty horses, and, by the help of these relays, it was easy to travel an hundred miles in a day along the Roman roads.
Página 365 - Be it known, and without doubt unto you, that we all are, and every one of us, obedient subjects to the Church of God, and to the Pope of Rome, and to every godly Christian, to love every one in his degree in perfect charity, and to help every one of them, by word and deed, to...
Página 186 - All these cities were connected with each other, and with the capital, by the public highways, which issuing from the Forum of Rome, traversed Italy, pervaded the provinces, and were terminated only by the frontiers of the empire.
Página 368 - 0 king, in the depth of winter, while you are feasting with your thanes, and the fire is blazing on the hearth in the midst of the hall, you have seen a bird, pelted by the storm, enter at one door, and escape at the other. During its passage it was visible: but whence it came, or whither it went, you knew not. Such to me appears the life of man. He walks the earth for a few years: but what precedes his birth, or what is to follow after his death, we cannot tell. Undoubtedly, if the new religion...
Página 166 - Yea, it not only maketh things past, present; but enableth one to make a rational conjecture of things to come. For this world affordeth no new accidents, but in the same sense wherein we call it a new moon, which is the old one in another shape, and yet no other than what hath been formerly. Old actions return again, furbished over with some new and different circumstances.
Página 382 - Compute the chances, And deem there's ne'er a one in dangerous times Who wins the race of glory, but than him A thousand men more gloriously endowed Have fallen upon the course ; a thousand others Have had their fortunes...
Página 186 - The public roads were accurately divided by milestones, and ran in a direct line from one city to another, with very little respect for the obstacles either of nature or private property. Mountains were perforated, and bold arches thrown over the broadest and most rapid streams.