La Belle assemblée: or, Bell's court and fashionable magazine, Band 4J. Bell, 1811 |
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... elegant and new PATTERN for NEEDLE - WORK . 6. JACK's DiscOVERIES ; an Original Song for the Harp and Piano - forte , composed by Mr. DIEDIN , expressly and exclusively for this Work . LITERARY CONTENTS . FINE ARTS . BIOGRAPHICAL ...
... elegant and new PATTERN for NEEDLE - WORK . 6. JACK's DiscOVERIES ; an Original Song for the Harp and Piano - forte , composed by Mr. DIEDIN , expressly and exclusively for this Work . LITERARY CONTENTS . FINE ARTS . BIOGRAPHICAL ...
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... elegant style . Authentic accounts of Births , Marriages , Deaths , and Provincial Intelligence , possessing any peculiar character , will hereafter meet with the most respectful attention , and a reason will be assigned in the next ...
... elegant style . Authentic accounts of Births , Marriages , Deaths , and Provincial Intelligence , possessing any peculiar character , will hereafter meet with the most respectful attention , and a reason will be assigned in the next ...
Seite 10
... elegant young man pass me , along with the lady of the feast . She led him to a raised platform , on which stood a splendid harp and a Grecian chair . He sat down in the one , and began to tune the other . The groupe thus formed seemed ...
... elegant young man pass me , along with the lady of the feast . She led him to a raised platform , on which stood a splendid harp and a Grecian chair . He sat down in the one , and began to tune the other . The groupe thus formed seemed ...
Seite 11
... lord , renowned for his drinking songs . The King seeing him enter , ran to meet him , and taking Apollo by the hand : - " You see , " said he , " a rival in this animate genius and the elegant arts . A cygnet was B 2 ON MYTHOLOGY . 11 .
... lord , renowned for his drinking songs . The King seeing him enter , ran to meet him , and taking Apollo by the hand : - " You see , " said he , " a rival in this animate genius and the elegant arts . A cygnet was B 2 ON MYTHOLOGY . 11 .
Seite 14
... elegant arts . A cygnet was placed at his feet ; this bird was conse- crated to him on account of the tender and melodious mauner with which it sings its ap- proaching death , as if the term of existence was the epoch of happiness . I ...
... elegant arts . A cygnet was placed at his feet ; this bird was conse- crated to him on account of the tender and melodious mauner with which it sings its ap- proaching death , as if the term of existence was the epoch of happiness . I ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
admiration Aldonga appeared arms aunt bath Battle of Wagram beauty body called calyx Catharine character charms child Clairville colour Countess of Berkeley court cried daughter dear death dress Earl earth elegant eyes fashion father favour female French gave gentleman give grace Gregory Orloff hand happy head heard heart Heaven honour hope hour Jeronimo Julie King lace Lady Lady Berkeley Lady Lovelace Ladyship letter living look Lord Berkeley Madame Majesty Majesty's manner marriage married ment Millichamp morning mother Mount Parnassus Mountnorris nature neral never night observed ornamented passed Persian person Potemkin present Prince Prince Potemkin racter received rendered replied returned rock Roman round satin Satterthwaite seat seen shew soon stamen sweet thing thou thought tion took virtue whilst wife Windsor Castle woman worn young
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 99 - But hark! My pulse like a soft drum Beats my approach, tells thee I come; And slow howe'er my marches be, I shall at last sit down by thee.
Seite 99 - Thou wilt not wake Till I thy fate shall overtake : Till age, or grief, or sickness must Marry my body to that dust It so much loves, and fill the room My heart keeps empty in thy tomb.
Seite 144 - And hang their heads with sorrow. Good grows with her; In her days every man shall eat in safety Under his own vine what he plants, and sing The merry songs of peace to all his neighbours.
Seite 174 - A stranger yet to pain! I feel the gales that from ye blow A momentary bliss bestow, As waving fresh their gladsome wing, My weary soul they seem to soothe, And, redolent of joy and youth, To breathe a second spring.
Seite 375 - ... thee ; And Water shall hear me, And know thee and fly thee ; And the Winds shall not touch thee When they pass by thee, And the Dews shall not wet thee, When they fall nigh thee : And thou shalt seek Death To release thee, in vain ; Thou shalt live in thy pain, While Kehama shall reign, With a fire in thy heart, And a fire in thy brain ; And sleep shall obey me, And visit thee never, And the curse shall be on thee For ever and ever.
Seite 85 - The idol is a block of wood, having a frightful visage painted black, with a distended mouth of a bloody colour. His arms are of gold, and he is dressed in gorgeous apparel. The other two idols are of a white and yellow colour. — Five elephants preceded the three towers, bearing towering flags, dressed in crimson caparisons, and having bells hanging to their caparisons, which sounded musically as they moved.
Seite 206 - Duke d'Usseda ought to be called upon, as it was his business. The duke was gone out; thejire burnt fiercer; and the king endured it, rather than derogate from his dignity.
Seite 168 - John found that this fellow had a. sword in his hand, and this he immediately seized, and gave several blows with it, his knife being no longer serviceable. At length the robbers, finding so many of their party had been killed or wounded, employed themselves in removing the bodies...
Seite 266 - Would you a maid undo, Whose greatest failing is her love, And that her love for you ? Say, would you use that very power You from her fondness claim, To ruin, in one fatal hour, A life of spotless fame ? Ah ! cease, my dear, to do an ill, Because perhaps you may ; But rather try your utmost skill To save me, than betray.
Seite 349 - These are not the absurd adventures, of a piety foreign to human nature: it is the most pathetic history — a history which not only extorts tears by its beauty, but whose consequences, applied to the universe, have changed the face of the earth. I had just beheld the monuments of Greece, and my mind was still profoundly impressed with their grandeur; but how far inferior were the sensations which they excited to those which I felt at the sight of the places commemorated in the gospel!