Life in the West: Back-wood Leaves and Prairie Flowers; Rough Sketches on the Borders of the Picturesque, the Sublime, and RidiculousSaunders and Otley, 1842 - 363 σελίδες |
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Σελίδα 7
... windows , I look through the odd volumes , the scraps , and backs of books , miscalled the library ; truly the ship's books have been very badly kept ; here I find dozens of a neatly bound thin octavo , kicking about in every direction ...
... windows , I look through the odd volumes , the scraps , and backs of books , miscalled the library ; truly the ship's books have been very badly kept ; here I find dozens of a neatly bound thin octavo , kicking about in every direction ...
Σελίδα 18
... windows , barbers ' poles , swinging signs , that adorn for ever the main street of that " pride of empire and throne of state , " the antiqne borough of Athlone . Nevertheless , here I resolved to halt for the night , and being set ...
... windows , barbers ' poles , swinging signs , that adorn for ever the main street of that " pride of empire and throne of state , " the antiqne borough of Athlone . Nevertheless , here I resolved to halt for the night , and being set ...
Σελίδα 19
... window - sashes , looked down upon the crowded street . The market was over , yet the people lingered about the public - house's corner and gateways , drinking , laughing , and shouting ; while ever and anon rose high in air the ...
... window - sashes , looked down upon the crowded street . The market was over , yet the people lingered about the public - house's corner and gateways , drinking , laughing , and shouting ; while ever and anon rose high in air the ...
Σελίδα 20
... window sill , speaking to his friends below , and nodding familiarly to the crowd , till the squire's rage rose ; then would the hairdresser return , and endeavour to mollify the hasty squire . " Come out of the window , and cut my hair ...
... window sill , speaking to his friends below , and nodding familiarly to the crowd , till the squire's rage rose ; then would the hairdresser return , and endeavour to mollify the hasty squire . " Come out of the window , and cut my hair ...
Σελίδα 21
... window . Now , stop a bit till I regale my nose , as Major O'Flannagan says when I'm shaving him . Do you snuff , Master Thom ? " " Confound your snuff - you have let some of it fall into my eye . " " Bear it , child , bear it ! as my ...
... window . Now , stop a bit till I regale my nose , as Major O'Flannagan says when I'm shaving him . Do you snuff , Master Thom ? " " Confound your snuff - you have let some of it fall into my eye . " " Bear it , child , bear it ! as my ...
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Συχνά εμφανιζόμενοι όροι και φράσεις
a-head agent arms baggage Baltinglass bank bar-room began blanket boat breakfast buggy called Canada canoe captain Chatham colonel Council Lodge cried deck declared dinner doctor dollars door Dublin entered exclaimed face farm fire followed Fort Winnebago French gallant band gentleman Goderich green Grignons half-breeds hand head heard honour horse host Indians John Jonathan Wild labourers lady lake Lake Michigan land legs Little Fox River log canoe look midst miles morning never Newfoundland dog night Osh Cosh passengers poor prairie replied returned river road round rushed seat seemed shew shump side soon squaws squire steamer streets sundry tall thisk thought took town traders trees Truemore turned waggon walk whip whisky wigwams wild wind window Wolf River woman woods Yellowley young
Δημοφιλή αποσπάσματα
Σελίδα 168 - And Gilpin, long live he; And when he next doth ride abroad, May I be there to see ! AN EPISTLE TO A PROTESTANT LADY IN FRANCE.
Σελίδα 265 - At breakfast we had five or six plates of the scarlet fruit pompously paraded and eagerly devoured, with hearty commendations, by the guests. Some eat them with milk, others with vinegar and mustard, some with sugar and molasses. I essayed to follow suit, and was very near refunding the rest of my breakfast upon the table, the sickly flavour of flattongue grass,' sour milk, and raw cabbage, being concealed under the beautiful skin of the love-apple I had the temerity to swallow. At dinner, tomatoes...
Σελίδα 258 - Rept., Agriculture, 1852-53, Part II, p. 152. ""Dined at the house of a thriving New Englander, who from small beginnings, is now the proprietor of five thousand acres of prairie land; he has enclosed several fields of Indian corn with ditches Instead of rails...
Σελίδα 263 - I strained my eyes into the oak openings, right and left, in quest of balconies, piazzas, stoops, and colonnades. Mr. Morrison, the innkeeper, welcomed us to Madison, led the way into his bar, volunteered whisky and water, or a cobbler, to drive the night dew out of our throats. Moreover, the good man accommodated me with a single-bedded room, a luxury I had not enjoyed for some time. Sunday morning: rose refreshed, and marched out to look at the city, which had vanished like a dream, leaving that...
Σελίδα 33 - Prudence is said to be the better part of valour— " He that fights and runs away, May live " The " may live" of that dry distich stuck in my throat.
Σελίδα 264 - ... a garden in his luxuriant brain as enabled him to dispense with the rich productions of Illinois at his table, without a murmur; but how he had reduced himself and family to enjoy a tomato, was beyond my comprehension. Tomato was the word — the theme — the song, from morning till night — from night till morning. The first morning I descended to the bar, there sat the colonel in his white and black chip hat, set jauntily over his round, heavy, swelled face, his crooked foot resting on one...
Σελίδα 258 - Indian corn with ditches instead of rails — more permanent work — answering the double purpose of staying the prairie fire and keeping off cattle; he has sunk a well, and built stables, barn, and hog-pen, on a large scale, and, like a wise man, lived, up to this, in a simple log and mud cabin. I am really at a loss to know where the good people in this country — this out of the way place — find all the good things they set before travellers, especially the New Englanders...
Σελίδα 249 - I soon discovered to be a stagnant pool, or succession of stagnant pools, separated from the lake by a goodly barrier of sand, mayhap earth and rock.
Σελίδα 227 - ... white-walled fort on the heights, is the most European-looking spot I have yet seen in this New World. This was one of the earliest, and I believe principal stations and rendezvous of the great fur-trading companies, servants, chasseurs, Indians, and mighty hunters; and at present it has all that striking appearance of mimic war, owing to the sudden influx of Indians; a regular gathering of the Chippewas and Ottawas seems to have taken place, and their long rows of wigwams, fires, canoes, picturesque...
Σελίδα 227 - Makina, or Mackinac, with its antiquated French village and white-walled fort on the heights, is the most European-looking spot I have yet seen in this New World. This was one of the earliest, and I believe principal stations and rendezvous of the great fur-trading companies, servants, chasseurs, Indians, and mighty hunters; and at present it has all that striking appearance of mimic war, owing to the sudden influx of Indians; a regular gathering of the Chippewas and Ottawas seems to have taken place,...