Miscellanies |
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Page 15
... brave and enthusiastic people on their foes , and crushed them to pieces . Astonished at these victories , the French government gathered its best armies round this resolute province till 100,000 men hemmed it in , some of them ...
... brave and enthusiastic people on their foes , and crushed them to pieces . Astonished at these victories , the French government gathered its best armies round this resolute province till 100,000 men hemmed it in , some of them ...
Page 16
... bravery and success , Mr. Alison says : " Thus was the invasion of six armies , amount- ing to 100,000 troops , part of whom were the best soldiers of France , defeated , and losses inflicted on the republicans , incomparably greater ...
... bravery and success , Mr. Alison says : " Thus was the invasion of six armies , amount- ing to 100,000 troops , part of whom were the best soldiers of France , defeated , and losses inflicted on the republicans , incomparably greater ...
Page 17
... bravery and enthusi- asm on the one side , and such atrocities on the other , furnishes Mr. Alison with excellent materials for his accustomed quota of reflections ; and what are they ? " Such , " he says , " were the astonishing ...
... bravery and enthusi- asm on the one side , and such atrocities on the other , furnishes Mr. Alison with excellent materials for his accustomed quota of reflections ; and what are they ? " Such , " he says , " were the astonishing ...
Page 51
... brave , and patriotic race . These great and commanding features of the Canadian cha- racter are working such wonderous effects in the race , that ( he continues ) they " may in some future period , come to counterbalance all the riches ...
... brave , and patriotic race . These great and commanding features of the Canadian cha- racter are working such wonderous effects in the race , that ( he continues ) they " may in some future period , come to counterbalance all the riches ...
Page 60
... brave struggles on sea and land of the war of 1812 , do not prove that we have been able to " pro- tect " ourselves , will the historian say what can prove it ? If the flag of the States left floating over a con- quered enemy after ...
... brave struggles on sea and land of the war of 1812 , do not prove that we have been able to " pro- tect " ourselves , will the historian say what can prove it ? If the flag of the States left floating over a con- quered enemy after ...
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Common terms and phrases
action Alfieri Alison amid aristocracy arms army authority battle battle of Edgehill blood bold Bonaparte brave Camille Desmoulins Carlyle carried cause character Charles Christian church civil clergy commenced Cromwell Cromwell's Crusades declares deputies despotism Endymion enemy England English Europe everything evils excitement exhibited fear feeling fell feudal fierce fire force France French Revolution hands head heart heaven human Irish Jacobin Club Jacobins Jerusalem justice king land length liberty Long Parliament look Lord Luther massacres ment midst monarchy National Assembly never nobility noble Oliver Cromwell oppression Paris Parliament passed passion Peter the Hermit Pomona pope prayer princes Rebellion Reformation republicanism retributive justice Revolutionary Tribunal Robespierre Rump Parliament scenes seemed sent shout solemn soul speak spirit strong struggle suffering sword terrible terror thing thought thousand throne tiers etat tion took troops truth tyranny victory violence whole write
Popular passages
Page 151 - I have sought the Lord night and day, that He would rather slay me than put me upon the doing of this work.
Page 150 - You have sat too long here for any good you have been doing. Depart, I say, and let us have done with you. In the name of God, go!
Page 140 - We are upon an Engagement very difficult. The Enemy hath blocked up our way at the Pass at Copperspath, through which we cannot get without almost a miracle. He lieth so upon the Hills that we know not how to come that way without great difficulty; and our lying here daily consumeth our men, who fall sick beyond imagination.
Page 140 - If your forces had been in a readiness to have fallen upon the back of Copperspath, it might have occasioned supplies to have come to us. But the only wise God knows what is best. All shall work for Good. Our spirits are comfortable, praised be the Lord, — though our present condition be as it is.
Page 140 - I perceive your forces are not in a capacity for present relief; wherefore (whatever becomes of us) it will be well for you to get what forces you can together; and the South to help what they can. The business nearly concerneth all good people. If your forces had been in a readiness to have fallen upon the back of Copperspath, it might have occasioned supplies to have come to us; but the only wise God knows what is best. All shall work for good. Our spirits are comfortable (praised be the Lord),...
Page 104 - ... what is it, all this Rushworthian inarticulate rubbish-continent, in its ghastly dim twilight, with its haggard wrecks and pale shadows ; what is it, but the common Kingdom of Death ? This is what we call Death, this mouldering dumb wilderness of things once alive. Behold here the final evanescence of Formed human things ; they had form, but they are changing into sheer formlessness ; — ancient human speech itself has sunk into unintelligible maundering. This is the collapse, — the etiolation...
Page 222 - exclaimed he ; ' how could they allow these scoundrels to enter ? They ought to have blown four or five hundred of them into the air with cannon ; the rest would then have taken to their ' — DE BOUKKIENNE, tip 49.]
Page 144 - I wish that all honest hearts may give the glory of this to God alone, to whom indeed the praise of this mercy belongs.
Page 282 - Come, come ! I am ready I am ready to lay down my life for thy truth . . . patient as a lamb. For it is the cause of justice — it is thine. ... I will never separate myself from thee ; neither now, nor through eternity. . . . And though the world should be filled with devils — though my body, which is still the work of thy hands, should be slain...
Page 105 - ... progress towards utter silence and disappearance ; disastrous ever-deepening Dusk of Gods and Men ! Why has the living ventured thither, down from the cheerful light, across the Lethe-swamps and tartarean Phlegethons, onwards to these baleful halls of Dis and the three-headed Dog ? Some Destiny drives him.