The Port Folio, Tom 2Editor and Asbury Dickens, 1809 |
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Strona 13
... continued our way . Entering a street , where , from one end to the other , there was no- thing but barbers ' shops , I inquired the reason why there was so many of this trade in a place inhabited by learned men who let their hair and ...
... continued our way . Entering a street , where , from one end to the other , there was no- thing but barbers ' shops , I inquired the reason why there was so many of this trade in a place inhabited by learned men who let their hair and ...
Strona 16
... continued , and what excuse can the lawyers find , who live for others , continually occupied in suits and cares foreign to themselves ? whose memory is an elephant that sustains castles and even mountains of dis- sertations and books ...
... continued , and what excuse can the lawyers find , who live for others , continually occupied in suits and cares foreign to themselves ? whose memory is an elephant that sustains castles and even mountains of dis- sertations and books ...
Strona 17
... continued his dis- course , saying , this is the slave Esop , who having induced these animals to speak , teaches by their means the true moral and natural philosophy , considering them as the best and most secure masters . And is this ...
... continued his dis- course , saying , this is the slave Esop , who having induced these animals to speak , teaches by their means the true moral and natural philosophy , considering them as the best and most secure masters . And is this ...
Strona 30
... continued to in- sinuate , that to know the incidents of a German or Spanish campaign , cannot very materially benefit a native of America , who has his bread to get by his industry , and his family to cherish by domestic virtues . He ...
... continued to in- sinuate , that to know the incidents of a German or Spanish campaign , cannot very materially benefit a native of America , who has his bread to get by his industry , and his family to cherish by domestic virtues . He ...
Strona 31
... continued , can be gained from the bickerings of faction , vulgarly called politics , and from the shreds and fragments , trifling , contradictory , and vague , to be found in news- papers , and gravely dignified with the name of ...
... continued , can be gained from the bickerings of faction , vulgarly called politics , and from the shreds and fragments , trifling , contradictory , and vague , to be found in news- papers , and gravely dignified with the name of ...
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accent Adam Smith admiration affection American amusement antimony appears attention beautiful Billy Taylor Blackletter called captain cause character christian colour command delight Derry door Edinburg elegant emotions expression Falstaff favour feelings frequently genius gentleman give grace hand happy heart honour HORATIO GATES human ideas labours lady Laertes language learned letter limestone literary M'Intosh manner means ment merit mind moral mountains mulatto nature never Nicholas Biddle o'er object observed occasion OLDSCHOOL opinion pain pass passions pause perhaps person Petrarch Philadelphia pleasure poem poet Polonius PORT FOLIO present principles QUIZ racter reader respect scarcely scene Seneca Lake sentiments Shakspeare shore Sir CH society soon soul spirit style sweet syllables talents taste thing thou thought tion tophe verse vessel virtue Voltaire whip-poor-will whole words writing young