The Bee, Or Literary Intelligencer, Volume 11James Anderson Mundell and Son, Parliament Stairs, 1792 - Books, Reviews |
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Page 20
... fall , Where , from the mountains with papyrus crown'd , The venerable Nile impetuous pours His headlong torrent ; he shall guide thy steps To those irriguous plains , whose triple sides His arms surround ; there have the fates decreed ...
... fall , Where , from the mountains with papyrus crown'd , The venerable Nile impetuous pours His headlong torrent ; he shall guide thy steps To those irriguous plains , whose triple sides His arms surround ; there have the fates decreed ...
Page 25
... fall by treason too ; He , by a justice all - divine , Shall fall a victim at my fhrine ; As I was his he fhall be mine . IV . Thy troubled life regret no more , For fate will waft thee soon ashore , And to thy Pompey thee restore ...
... fall by treason too ; He , by a justice all - divine , Shall fall a victim at my fhrine ; As I was his he fhall be mine . IV . Thy troubled life regret no more , For fate will waft thee soon ashore , And to thy Pompey thee restore ...
Page 34
... fall , would , under proper management , have a power over machinery , next to infinite , would give to manufactures there , an unrival- led advantage over all others . The sterility of the coun- try is nothing ; it is more fertile than ...
... fall , would , under proper management , have a power over machinery , next to infinite , would give to manufactures there , an unrival- led advantage over all others . The sterility of the coun- try is nothing ; it is more fertile than ...
Page 50
... fall into the hands of some of the gentlemen who are to go with lord Macartney , on his embassy to China ; and may probably suggest to them some subjects of enquiry that might other- wise escape them , among the vast diversity of new ...
... fall into the hands of some of the gentlemen who are to go with lord Macartney , on his embassy to China ; and may probably suggest to them some subjects of enquiry that might other- wise escape them , among the vast diversity of new ...
Page 72
... fall at cer- tain stated seasons , it is obvious that if we can enable them , by the circulation of cash , which must attend the ' culture of silk , to purchase grain from other countries when their own crop fails , we fhall render au ...
... fall at cer- tain stated seasons , it is obvious that if we can enable them , by the circulation of cash , which must attend the ' culture of silk , to purchase grain from other countries when their own crop fails , we fhall render au ...
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Common terms and phrases
addrefs admit adopted afsembly animal appear Arcadians attention bread fruit tree businefs cantons circumstances clafs cocoons Crinan custode DEAR SIR decreed definitive denote derive Dr James Anderson Editor employed Engliſh expence exprefsive farther favour feet fhall fhould fhow fiſh Fort St George France freſh gender give happineſs impofsible inches Jacobin club James's John's kind language lefs letter lofs machinery manner means mind minister mode moving power nature necefsary never nopal noun object obliged observe occasion Opico Paolo Rolli particular paſs person plants pleasure plural pofsefsion pofsible pope Clement XII poſseſsive present produce pronoun quicklime readers reason received respect Scotland seems sent Sept ſhall ſhe ſhow silk worm singular sort taste thing tion variation vegetable viper Walbaum weight wheel whole word young
Popular passages
Page 326 - I have of late, but wherefore I know not, lost all my mirth, forgone all custom of exercises ; and indeed it goes so heavily with my disposition that this goodly frame, the earth, seems to me a sterile promontory ; this most excellent canopy, the air, look you, this brave o'erhanging firmament, this majestical roof fretted with golden fire, why, it appears no other thing to me than a foul and pestilent congregation of vapours.
Page 145 - Jupiter, who had decreed that a lasting union should be solemnized between them, so soon as they were arrived at maturer years. But in the mean time the sons of men deviated from their native innocence ; Vice and Ruin overran the earth with giant strides ; and Astrea, with her train of celestial visitants, forsook their polluted abodes.
Page 300 - ... it was requited, he began at length to make excuses, and beg a thousand pardons, when the Indian interrupted him, and said, "When you see poor Indians fainting for a cup of cold water, don't say again, 'Get you gone, you Indian dog!
Page 299 - No, you shall have none here, replied the planter. But I am very faint, said the savage. Will you give me only a draught of cold water? Get you gone, you Indian dog; you shall have nothing here, said the planter.
Page 145 - Hope, who was his nurse, and conveyed by her to the forests of Arcadia, where he was brought up among the shepherds. But Jupiter assigned him a different partner, and commanded him to espouse Sorrow, the daughter of Ate. He complied with reluctance ; for her features were...
Page 146 - One day, as she sat musing by the waters of Helicon, her tears by chance fell into the fountain; and ever since the Muse's spring has retained a strong taste of the infusion.
Page 145 - From this union sprung a virgin, in whom might be traced a strong resemblance to both her parents ; but the sullen and unamiable features of her mother were so mixed and blended with the sweetness of her father, that her countenance, though mournful, was highly pleasing. The maids and shepherds of the neighbouring plains gathered round, and called her Pity. A...
Page 300 - He then offered him some venison, and such other refreshment as his store afforded, and having laid some bearskins for his bed, he desired that he would repose himself for the night, and he would awake him early in the morning, and conduct him on his way. Accordingly in the morning they set off, and the Indian led him out of the forest, and put him into the...
Page 298 - The bodies were buried in a cross-road, and a stone erected over the grave, with this inscription : " Here lie the remains of four unknown ruffians, who> deservedly lost ' their lives, in an attempt to rob and murder a worthy woman and her family. A stranger who slept in the house, to which Divine Providence undoubtedly directed him, was the principal instrument in preventing the perpetration of such horrid designs, which justly entitles him to a lasting memorial, and the thanks of the public. John...
Page 298 - ... the blows were repeated, and the door almost broken through by a sledge, or some heavy instrument. By this time the widow and her daughters were much alarmed by this violent attack, and ran almost frantic through different parts of the house, exclaiming