Elegant Extracts, Or, Useful and Entertaining Passages from the Best English Authors and Translations: Principally Designed for the Use of Young Persons, Band 2S. Walker, 1826 |
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Seite 104
... hope for power , and aspire at the they have gained over to their party , chief management of public affairs ; by the hopes of seeing the scheme imagining they shall obtain those of rapine renewed ; for I consider honours by throwing ...
... hope for power , and aspire at the they have gained over to their party , chief management of public affairs ; by the hopes of seeing the scheme imagining they shall obtain those of rapine renewed ; for I consider honours by throwing ...
Seite 112
... hope ; what their eyes showed plain- their native soil that alone shows ly must be done , they trusted their their merit , but the memorial of them , own valour to accomplish , thinking better than all inscriptions , in every it more ...
... hope ; what their eyes showed plain- their native soil that alone shows ly must be done , they trusted their their merit , but the memorial of them , own valour to accomplish , thinking better than all inscriptions , in every it more ...
Seite 293
... hope to carries us forward and backward , to keep our resolutions , we declare future and to past ages . We ima- them to confirm our own hope , and gine that the things which affect us fix our own inconstancy by calling must affect ...
... hope to carries us forward and backward , to keep our resolutions , we declare future and to past ages . We ima- them to confirm our own hope , and gine that the things which affect us fix our own inconstancy by calling must affect ...
Inhalt
Sect | 1 |
The effects of a dissolution of the Fede | 16 |
Necessity of the Union | 23 |
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affected America appear arms army Athenians body Cæsar called Catiline cendant character Chesterfield Cicero citizens civil command conduct consul crown danger death enemies England equally execution eyes father favour force fortune France friends gentlemen give Greece hand happiness hath heart Henry honour hope human Iago Italy Julius Cæsar justice king kingdom lence liberty live lord Macedon manner means ment mind ministers nation nature neral never noble obliged occasion parliament passion Patricians peace person pleasure Pliny the Younger political Pompey possessed prince racter reign Rienzi Roman Rome Scotland seemed senate sent sion slaves Spain speak spect spirit temper thee ther thing thou thought tion treache truth tural ture uncle Toby vices vigour virtue whole word