Biography of J.S. Buckminster, S.C. Thacher and J.E. AbbotL.C. Bowles, 1833 - 176 Seiten |
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Seite 20
... arrival in Switzerland , of which no particular account may have yet reach- ed America , and which I think cannot be uninteresting , especially to those of our friends who have visited this charming country . Indeed it is too disastrous ...
... arrival in Switzerland , of which no particular account may have yet reach- ed America , and which I think cannot be uninteresting , especially to those of our friends who have visited this charming country . Indeed it is too disastrous ...
Seite 53
... arrived before the middle of the month , the two friends were compelled to separate . Mr Buckminster set off on a tour through Switzerland , and Mr Thach- er proceeded to Paris . ' And what shall I write you of Paris , ' he says , in ...
... arrived before the middle of the month , the two friends were compelled to separate . Mr Buckminster set off on a tour through Switzerland , and Mr Thach- er proceeded to Paris . ' And what shall I write you of Paris , ' he says , in ...
Seite 55
... arrival on the Continent , and for a month before , he has had no return , nor symptom of a return , of his disorder . ' And in another letter , dated December 20th , he says ; " The cli- mate of France agrees wonderfully with Mr B. who ...
... arrival on the Continent , and for a month before , he has had no return , nor symptom of a return , of his disorder . ' And in another letter , dated December 20th , he says ; " The cli- mate of France agrees wonderfully with Mr B. who ...
Seite 58
... arrived in Boston . Soon after his return he accepted the office of Librarian of Har- vard College , and entered on his duties in 1808 . The discharge of his duties as Librarian left Mr Thacher time for the study of his profession . The ...
... arrived in Boston . Soon after his return he accepted the office of Librarian of Har- vard College , and entered on his duties in 1808 . The discharge of his duties as Librarian left Mr Thacher time for the study of his profession . The ...
Seite 61
... arriving at Worcester , he was attacked with a raising of blood from the lungs , which immediately reduced him to a state of extreme debility . This attack confined him in Worcester nearly a month ; and when at last he re- sumed his ...
... arriving at Worcester , he was attacked with a raising of blood from the lungs , which immediately reduced him to a state of extreme debility . This attack confined him in Worcester nearly a month ; and when at last he re- sumed his ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
ABBOT affectionate Alps altar appearance arrival beautiful Boston brother Buckminster Cape Cape Town ceive character cheerful church climate convent cough dear death delight duties earth and stones England Exeter father fatigue feelings flying fish Franciscans friars friends Goldau HARVARD COLLEGE Havana heart hope interest Jeremy Taylor kind knew labors lake of Lowertz lake of Zug land letter London look mass ment mind minister Miralla monks Moro Moulins mountain ness never once Paris Paseo passed peculiar piety pleasant pleasure prayers preach profession received recollection Rigi Rossberg ruins says scene Schweitz seemed seen sick side soon speak spirit spot St Domingo Stellenbosch stranger strength Switzerland Table Mountain Thacher thing thought tion tranquil village volantes voyage Vulgate walk weather whole Widener Library wish wooden figure writing
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 174 - E'en while with us thy footsteps trod, His seal was on thy brow. Dust to its narrow house beneath ! Soul to its place on high ! They that have seen thy look in death, No more may fear to die.
Seite 164 - Now, Spring returns : but not to me returns The vernal joy my better years have known ; Dim in my breast life's dying taper burns, And all the joys of life with health are flown.
Seite 92 - ... long loved ; they cannot read, as in a book, the mute language of his face ; they have not learned to wait upon his habits, and anticipate his wants, and he has not learned to communicate, without hesitation, all his wishes, impressions, and thoughts, to them. He feels that he is a stranger ; and a more desolate feeling than that could not visit his soul. — How much is expressed by that form of oriental benediction, May you die among your kindred...
Seite 130 - How can we sing the Lord's song in a strange land? If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand forget her cunning. If I do not remember thee, let my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth.
Seite 21 - The former channel of a large stream is choked up, and its course altered ; and as the outlets and passage of large bodies of water must be affected by the filling up of such a portion of the lake, the...
Seite 92 - ... the low whispers of anxious affection; that the very icicles clinging to his own eaves, and the snow beating against his own windows, would be far more pleasant to his eyes, than the bloom and verdure which only more forcibly remind him how far he is from that one spot which is dearer to him than the world beside. He may, indeed, find estimable friends, who will do all in their power to promote his comfort and assuage his pains ; but they cannot supply the place of the long known and...
Seite 25 - It was about a week after the fall of the mountain, that our route through Switzerland led us to visit this scene of desolation ; and never can I forget the succession of melancholy views, which presented themselves to our curiosity. In our way to it, we landed at Art, a town situated at the southern extremity of the lake of Zug ; and we skirted along the western boundary of the ruins, by the side of Mount Rigi, towards the lake of Lowertz.
Seite 114 - ... enkindled the feeble and dying flame within me. I suppose that every person, when restored from sickness, flatters himself that the feelings of piety, which deliverance awakens, will not decay. God grant that mine may be as permanent and influential as they ought to be ! " In another letter he speaks of his attendance on public worship, which he was just able to renew. " I could not help my mind from wandering much away, and being filled with recollections of the past years of my own life ; for...
Seite 27 - Ruffiberg, from whose bare side had rushed the destroyer of all this life and beauty. On his right was the lake of Lowertz, partly filled with the earth of the mountain. On the banks of this lake was all that remained of the town of Lowertz. Its church was demolished, but the tower yet stood, and the ruins shattered but not thrown down.
Seite 91 - It is a sad thing to feel that we must die away from our own home. Tell not the invalid who is yearning after his distant country, that the atmosphere around him is soft, that the gales are filled with balm, and the flowers are springing from the green earth ; — he knows that the softest air to his heart would be the air which hangs over his native land ; that more...