Julian: Or Scenes in Judea, Volume 1C. S. Francis, 1841 - American fiction |
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Page 21
... judge that it would scarce be so enduring , seeing that , though pre- senting everywhere the marks of newness , it presents also everywhere the signs of premature decay . A city built in a day is very likely to last but a day . And all ...
... judge that it would scarce be so enduring , seeing that , though pre- senting everywhere the marks of newness , it presents also everywhere the signs of premature decay . A city built in a day is very likely to last but a day . And all ...
Page 28
... judge me with more lenity , I am sure , when I tell you how odious a thing it is to bear the name of Jew in Rome . Were one born a full grown man , he might , perhaps , find philosophy enough to steel him against the taunts and gibes of ...
... judge me with more lenity , I am sure , when I tell you how odious a thing it is to bear the name of Jew in Rome . Were one born a full grown man , he might , perhaps , find philosophy enough to steel him against the taunts and gibes of ...
Page 31
... judge as a stranger , as to be a sufficient protection against lawless violence or rapacity on the part of the Roman governor . With a military force not more numerous than his , he must be weaker than the united popu- lace . " " Ah ...
... judge as a stranger , as to be a sufficient protection against lawless violence or rapacity on the part of the Roman governor . With a military force not more numerous than his , he must be weaker than the united popu- lace . " " Ah ...
Page 42
... judge from my present feelings and convictions , and if nothing adverse occur- red , I should be ready to take part with him and his friends in any measures they might think it proper to adopt . " What was I can see an approving smile ...
... judge from my present feelings and convictions , and if nothing adverse occur- red , I should be ready to take part with him and his friends in any measures they might think it proper to adopt . " What was I can see an approving smile ...
Page 43
... judge not our people amiss , they need but such an exam- ple as we shall set them to show themselves worthy of their fathers . " I assured him , as he said this , " that I should now remain in Cæsarea till the present affair was ended ...
... judge not our people amiss , they need but such an exam- ple as we shall set them to show themselves worthy of their fathers . " I assured him , as he said this , " that I should now remain in Cæsarea till the present affair was ended ...
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Common terms and phrases
affairs Anna appear approach asked beautiful behold believe beneath Beth-Harem brother Cæsar Cæsarea Centurion child countenance cried crowd curse dark daugh daughter doubt dwelling Enon evil faith father fear Governor Greeks hand hast hath hear heard heart Herod Herodians Herodium honor hope inhabitants Israel Jael Jerusalem Jewish Jordan Judea judge Judith Julian king kingdom knew land look Lord Lycias Machærus manner Messiah mind mother ness never numbers once passed peace Pharisees Phidippides Philip Pilate Pilate's prayers priests Procla prophet religion replied Onias Roman Rome rulers Sabbath Sadducee Samaria Sameas Saturninus scene seemed seen Sejanus Shammai side signs Simon slave soon soul speak spirit stand stood stranger surely Sylleus synagogue Thebez thee things thou thought Tiberius tion true truly truth turned virtue voice walls wine words worship Zadok Zeno Ziba
Popular passages
Page 15 - Judea had been governed by Herod, and after him by the Ethnarch, would see, in what had occasioned surprise to me, nothing but what agreed exactly with the now altered character of the population. I answered, that I was obliged to confess great ignorance of all that related to the Jews, as I was Roman born, and my reading and studies had lain in a quite different direction. At this flourish, which I had hoped should pass with him, he quickly rejoined, ' You may be Roman born, but, if so, your Hebrew...
Page 133 - I travelled, the dwellings of the inhabitants surrounded by their vineyards, for which they win a place where to a stranger's eye there seems little else than cliffs of rock. But wherever the ground opened, and the hills drew back a space, the cottages of the peasantry were thickly set together, buried beneath the foliage of the rich fruit-bearing trees of these climes, or encompassed by fields covered with the best products of the season, or by plantations of the olive and the fig. The tall and...
Page 295 - Lord's hand double for all her sins.' Isaiah proceeds, ' The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness. Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make straight in the desert a high way for our God.
Page 273 - the earth shall move out of her place and be like a chased roe "—but after that, "thou shalt no more be termed forsaken, neither shalt thy land any more be termed desolate; but thou shalt be called Hepzibah, and thy land Beulah; for the Lord delighteth in thee and thy land shall be married.
Page 165 - ... thought, of which he seemed to desire no participator. So we then rode along in silence together on our way ; but soon wearying of this, I left my uncle to his reflections, and turned back to where Ziba was slowly toiling along with his heavy-laden camel, that I might hold discourse with him. As I reached him he was singing at the top .of his voice a song in praise of the wines of Judea ; but soon as I joined him he broke off, saying, " that by the song he was singing he was trying to lose the...
Page 6 - ... which seems native to these orientals, the knowledge of it was not betrayed by word or look. I perceive you both to smile at this, as also to utter a few words expressive of a gentle contempt for an unworthy scion of an ancient house. The contempt from you I can bear ; but the smile by which you can seem to enjoy what you are pleased to term my credulity, I must say and believe is wasted. For more than once have I been assured by some of my own tribe that, but for a something in my eye, they...