American Monthly Knickerbocker, Volume 51Charles Fenno Hoffman, Timothy Flint, Lewis Gaylord Clark, John Holmes Agnew, Kinahan Cornwallis 1858 - American periodicals |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 96
Page 33
... hope of life and death lay centred . And now I fold my hands in calm and patient waiting , while the mournful melody of these two lines from Coleridge's ' Wallenstein ' rings in my ears and thrills my heart like music : ' THITHER where ...
... hope of life and death lay centred . And now I fold my hands in calm and patient waiting , while the mournful melody of these two lines from Coleridge's ' Wallenstein ' rings in my ears and thrills my heart like music : ' THITHER where ...
Page 35
... hope to gain my uncle John Massingale's consent . Alas ! poor Philip ! what a hopeless task is yours ! Thereupon , much to the surprise of my uncle , my resignation was sent in to the trustees of the Linklaen Academy . What could their ...
... hope to gain my uncle John Massingale's consent . Alas ! poor Philip ! what a hopeless task is yours ! Thereupon , much to the surprise of my uncle , my resignation was sent in to the trustees of the Linklaen Academy . What could their ...
Page 45
... Hope you'll be able to make a breakfast , Sir . ' I ate breakfast in amaze , cogitating whether these extraordinary attentions could be the result of the wide - spread fame of the house of Naryred and Company , or whether I had really ...
... Hope you'll be able to make a breakfast , Sir . ' I ate breakfast in amaze , cogitating whether these extraordinary attentions could be the result of the wide - spread fame of the house of Naryred and Company , or whether I had really ...
Page 55
... hope of salvation ; it springs from the crown of thorns , and , though itself sad , subdued , and full of softness , is yet so powerful that it entirely melts into the glow of it the forms of the leaves and boughs , which it crosses ...
... hope of salvation ; it springs from the crown of thorns , and , though itself sad , subdued , and full of softness , is yet so powerful that it entirely melts into the glow of it the forms of the leaves and boughs , which it crosses ...
Page 56
... hope the English public may be convinced of the simple truth , that neither a great fact , nor a great man , nor a great poem , nor a great picture , nor any other great thing , can be fathomed to the very bottom in a moment of time ...
... hope the English public may be convinced of the simple truth , that neither a great fact , nor a great man , nor a great poem , nor a great picture , nor any other great thing , can be fathomed to the very bottom in a moment of time ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
ALEXANDER HAMILTON asked beautiful Bremen Brian Boru Burroughs called dark dear death door dream earth Elma England English eyes face fair fancy father fear feel feet fire Garboard gaze Gipsies give gone grace hand head hear heard heart heaven Hermes Trismegistus honor hope hour Hugh Miller India JOHN WATERS knew KNICKERBOCKER labor lady letter light lips Lissette living look mind morning mother nature never New-York night o'er once palimpsest passed poor Pre-Raphaelite present Quaker Rachel Moore reader replied Saint Saint NICHOLAS scene seemed silent sleep smile soon soul speak spirit stood strange Stratford-upon-Avon sweet Tamerlane tears tell thee thing thou thought tion told Tom Bolt took turned village voice watched wind wonder words young