Phoenixiana: Or, Sketches and Burlesques |
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Page 5
... manner in relation to the order of arrangement of its contents ; and it is quite probable , that his severer taste and better judgment might have operated to exclude some things which are here embraced . The Editor can only say , that ...
... manner in relation to the order of arrangement of its contents ; and it is quite probable , that his severer taste and better judgment might have operated to exclude some things which are here embraced . The Editor can only say , that ...
Page 7
... manner in relation to the order of arrangement of its contents ; and it is quite probable , that his severer taste and better judgment might have operated to exclude some things which are here embraced . The Editor can only say , that ...
... manner in relation to the order of arrangement of its contents ; and it is quite probable , that his severer taste and better judgment might have operated to exclude some things which are here embraced . The Editor can only say , that ...
Page 27
... manner of the proprietor led me to suspect that the subject was distasteful , and I was reluctantly compelled to abandon it . " Near the Valley House , ' I observed an advertisement of ' The Mountain View , ' by P. Buckley ; but the ...
... manner of the proprietor led me to suspect that the subject was distasteful , and I was reluctantly compelled to abandon it . " Near the Valley House , ' I observed an advertisement of ' The Mountain View , ' by P. Buckley ; but the ...
Page 35
... spectacles were blue , and he wore a brown wig , beneath which , as I subse- quently ascertained , his bald head was laid off in lots , marked and numbered with Indian ink , after the manner of A NEW SYSTEM OF ENGLISH GRAMMAR . 35.
... spectacles were blue , and he wore a brown wig , beneath which , as I subse- quently ascertained , his bald head was laid off in lots , marked and numbered with Indian ink , after the manner of A NEW SYSTEM OF ENGLISH GRAMMAR . 35.
Page 36
... manner of the dia- gram upon his advertisement . Upon a small table lay many little books with yellow covers , several of the placards , pen and ink , a pair of iron callipers with brass knobs , and six dollars in silver . Having ...
... manner of the dia- gram upon his advertisement . Upon a small table lay many little books with yellow covers , several of the placards , pen and ink , a pair of iron callipers with brass knobs , and six dollars in silver . Having ...
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Common terms and phrases
accidently shot admiration appearance arrived beautiful Benicia Bigler Bogle Bowers Brown California called Captain carpet bag cat power cents cloth course delightful dollars dress Earth excellent opera excited expression gazed gentleman Gyascutus hand head heard Hotel House idea inhabitants instant interest John Bigler JOHN PHOENIX Joseph Bowers Judge Jupiter KEARNY STREET lady Lectures letter literary look magnificent manner Mary Howitt miles Mission of Dolores Moon morning Mudge never night observed opinion paper passed person PHOENIX Pike County planets Poetical present probably readers received remarks replied route San Diego Herald San Francisco Skewball smile Solar System Sonoma Squibob steamer story street sugar box sweet little village thar thing thirty feet thought tion turned Tushmaker vols volume week wharf young
Popular passages
Page 24 - OLD Mother Hubbard Went to the cupboard, To get her poor dog a bone: But when she got there The cupboard was bare, And so the poor dog had none.
Page 82 - Benicia a port of entry ; in view of all these circumstances I had, indeed, expected some trifling compliment — a public dinner, possibly, or peradventure a delicate present of a lot or two — the deeds inclosed in a neat and appropriate letter from the Town Council. But no! — the name of Squibob remains unhonored and unsung, and, what is far worse, unrecorded and untaxed in magnificent Benicia. " How sharper than a serpent's thanks it is to have a toothless child," as Pope beautifully remarks...
Page 109 - Archangel: but his face Deep scars of thunder had intrenched, and care Sat on his faded cheek, but under brows Of dauntless courage, and considerate* pride Waiting revenge.
Page 45 - The immense expense attending the production of this magnificent work; the length of time required to prepare the chorus; the incredible number of instruments destroyed at each rehearsal, have hitherto prevented M. Tarbox from placing it before the American public, and it has remained for San Diego to show herself superior to her sister cities of the Union, in musical taste and appreciation, and in high-souled...
Page 110 - We rose, and with an unfaltering voice said: "Well, Judge, how do you do ? " He made no reply, but commenced taking off his coat. We removed ours, also our cravat. * * # # * # * # # # # # * # * # The sixth and last round, is described by the pressman and compositors, as having been fearfully scientific. We held " the Judge " down over the Press by our nose (which we had inserted between his teeth for that purpose), and while our hair was employed in holding one of his hands, we held the other in...
Page 34 - Do you see how very close in this way you may approximate to the truth ; and how clearly your questioner will understand what he so anxiously wishes to arrive at — your exact state of health ? Let this system be adopted into our elements of grammar, our conversation, our literature, and we become at once an exact, precise, mathematical, truth-telling people. It will apply to everything but politics ; there, truth being of no account, the system is useless.
Page 62 - has been frequently questioned by modern philosophers. The whole subject is involved in doubt and obscurity. The only authority we have for believing that such an individual exists, and has been seen and spoken with, is a fragment of an old poem composed by an ancient Astronomer of the name of Goose, which has been handed down to us as follows : " The man in the Moon came down too soon To inquire the way to Norwich; The man in the South, he burned his mouth, Eating cold, hot porridge.
Page 109 - Judge" would whip us the moment he arrived; but though we thought a conflict probable, we had never been very sanguine as to its terminating in this manner. Coolly we gazed from the window of the Office upon the New Town road ; we descried a cloud of dust in the distance; high above it waved a whip lash, and we said, " the Judge" cometh, and " his driving is like Jehu the son of Nimshi, for he driveth furiously.
Page 11 - Feb. 15, 1855. It having been definitely determined that the great railroad, connecting the City of San Francisco with the head of navigation on Mission creek, should be constructed without unnecessary delay, a large appropriation ($120,000) was granted, for the purpose of causing thorough military examination to be made of the proposed routes. The routes which had principally attracted the attention of the public, were "the Northern...
Page 227 - Go away from here," said Tushmaker to Byles, "and return in a week, and I'll draw that tooth for you or know the reason why.". Byles got up, clapped a handkerchief to his jaw, and put forth. Then the dentist went to work, and in three days he invented an instrument which he was confident would pull anything. It was a combination of the lever, pulley, wheel and axle, inclined plane, wedge and screw. The castings were made, and the machine put up in the office, over an iron chair rendered perfectly...