Sketches of Germany and the Germans: With a Glance at Poland, Hungary, & Switzerland in 1834, 1835, and 1836, Volumen 1Whittaker, 1836 - 365 páginas |
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Página 15
... give it up . The impression produced on a near approach is not agreeable , as the whole island , with its cluster of sand banks and rocks , presents an appearance of the most arid sterility , scarcely affording sufficient nourish- ment ...
... give it up . The impression produced on a near approach is not agreeable , as the whole island , with its cluster of sand banks and rocks , presents an appearance of the most arid sterility , scarcely affording sufficient nourish- ment ...
Página 74
... gives the first blow is not only severely fined and imprisoned , but his an- tagonist is permitted to wreak upon him his full venge- ance , ( short of maiming or bloodshed , ) without being liable to punishment . The German is ...
... gives the first blow is not only severely fined and imprisoned , but his an- tagonist is permitted to wreak upon him his full venge- ance , ( short of maiming or bloodshed , ) without being liable to punishment . The German is ...
Página 77
... give a slight sketch . Firstly , The various details of the schools are arranged according to certain rules , from which the masters are not at liberty to depart . Secondly , These masters are all appointed by the minister , being first ...
... give a slight sketch . Firstly , The various details of the schools are arranged according to certain rules , from which the masters are not at liberty to depart . Secondly , These masters are all appointed by the minister , being first ...
Página 87
... give that which seemed to be most generally credited ; for it is not easy to obtain an accurate account of any public or political occurrence in a country where the censor so industriously exercises his scissors . The king , it appears ...
... give that which seemed to be most generally credited ; for it is not easy to obtain an accurate account of any public or political occurrence in a country where the censor so industriously exercises his scissors . The king , it appears ...
Página 93
... gives them access to the king , who is naturally timid , they are never weary of de- nouncing the republican principles of those classes who are not noble ; ascribing their prevalence to the allot- ment system , which has created a ...
... gives them access to the king , who is naturally timid , they are never weary of de- nouncing the republican principles of those classes who are not noble ; ascribing their prevalence to the allot- ment system , which has created a ...
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Términos y frases comunes
admiration agreeable amusement ancient appearance army arrived Austria Austrian empire Baden Baltic banks beautiful Berlin Bohemia capital Carlsbad Carlsruhe castle church commenced Danube Dresden duchy Duke Elbe emperor empire England English entered Europe exhibited extensive favourable favourite feet fertile forest Frederic French frequently German Hamburg Hanseatic League hills honour house of Hohenzollern hundred inhabitants interesting king lake landscape latter leagues distant Leipsick Lindau Lubeck Madonna majestic manners ment military mineral bath mountains natives neighbourhood never noble ornament owing paintings palace passed peasants picturesque pine plain Poland political population possesses Prague pretty Prince principal promenade Prussia rank readers residence Rhine Riesengebirge river road rocks romantic route royal Rügen ruins Saint Saxony scenery Silesia situated sovereign splendid stranger streets Styria summit surrounded table d'hôte taste theatre thousand tion towers town traveller Trieste valley Vienna villages waters whole
Pasajes populares
Página 53 - He who hath bent him o'er the dead Ere the first day of death is fled, The first dark day of nothingness, The last of danger and distress, (Before Decay's effacing fingers Have swept the lines where beauty lingers...
Página 95 - And I, brethren, could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto carnal, even as unto babes in Christ. I have fed you with milk, and not with meat : for hitherto ye were not able to bear it. Neither yet now are ye able.
Página 53 - Appals the gazing mourner's heart, As if to him it could impart The doom he dreads, yet dwells upon; Yes, but for these and these alone, Some moments, ay, one treacherous hour, He still might doubt the tyrant's power; So fair, so calm, so softly seal'd, The first, last look by death reveal'd!
Página 302 - Philadelphia, he soon started a mail from each of these cities three times a week in summer and once a week in winter. To get an answer from Boston a Philadelphian had been obliged to wait six weeks; the time was quickly reduced to three weeks.
Página 293 - Who o'er the herd would wish to reign, Fantastic, fickle, fierce, and vain ! Vain as the leaf upon the stream, And fickle as a changeful dream ; Fantastic as a woman's mood, And fierce as Frenzy's fever'd blood.
Página 95 - I have fed you with milk and not with meat," says St. Paul, " for ye were not able to bear it ; neither yet are ye able ;" he evidently implies a hope that they (ie not some future generation, but those very individuals) will be able to bear it : nay, he is evidently reproaching them for not being already better qualified for the reception of divine Truth. Indeed the very similitude of babes, of itself draws our attention...
Página 275 - He amused not a little the large circle that had gathered round him on the evening I first met him, with anecdotes of my lion-hunting countrymen. During the travelling season, he informed us, he frequently received a dozen notes in a day, each requesting the honour of an interview. The best bust of this distinguished man is by Rauch, and his portrait by Kolbe, of Dusseldorf, is a very accurate likeness.
Página 44 - The dreary crags on each side arose to such an altitude, as to exclude all prospect over the adjacent country ; and, in truth, the scenery was so wild, and the signs of human habitation so few, that a traveller might deem he had arrived in a country in a state of infancy ; and the appearance of the castle of Reinach, with its majestic towers, is hailed with pleasure. From this place a succession of picturesque rocks, ruins, villages, and lofty hills finely wooded, accompany us to Aschach, •where...
Página 178 - Those to the left are numerous, spacious, and lofty, while the others, though smaller, are more varied in their fantastic forms. As we advance they become more elevated, and the columns more majestic, till, after traversing two leagues in the heart of the earth, our progress is terminated by a deep subterranean lake. It would be impossible to describe, with any degree of accuracy, the varied natural architecture of this city of stalactites. In one place we appear wandering through the aisles of a...
Página 234 - ... cliffs, cut and intersected like those already described. From the farther bank, the plain gradually elevates itself into an irregular amphitheatre, terminated by a lofty, but rounded range of mountains. The striking feature is, that in the bosom of this amphitheatre, a plain of the most varied beauty, huge columnar hills start up at once from the ground, at great distances from each other, overlooking, in lonely and solemn grandeur, each its own portion of the domain. They are monuments which...