A General Collection of Voyages and Travels from the Discovery of America to Commencement of the Nineteenth Century, Volume 27R. Phillips & Company, 1809 |
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Page 8
... church is a fine handsome building , and had been opened for worship the Sunday before we arrived : on that day the bell of the Sabbath first sounded , during ten years of revolution , infidelity , and bloodshed !!! The royal arms are ...
... church is a fine handsome building , and had been opened for worship the Sunday before we arrived : on that day the bell of the Sabbath first sounded , during ten years of revolution , infidelity , and bloodshed !!! The royal arms are ...
Page 13
... churches , through the shattered casements of which the wind had free ad- mission . We breakfasted at a neat town called Bolbec , seven leagues from Havre , where we had excellent coffee , butter , and rolls . All the household of our ...
... churches , through the shattered casements of which the wind had free ad- mission . We breakfasted at a neat town called Bolbec , seven leagues from Havre , where we had excellent coffee , butter , and rolls . All the household of our ...
Page 15
... church . The gates were closed upon us , and in a moment , from the busy buzzing of the streets , we were translated into the silence of shattered tombs , and the gloom of clois- ters the only light which shone upon us , issued through ...
... church . The gates were closed upon us , and in a moment , from the busy buzzing of the streets , we were translated into the silence of shattered tombs , and the gloom of clois- ters the only light which shone upon us , issued through ...
Page 20
... cathedrals it is always placed midway The ornaments of the churches of England experienced a similar fate from the commissioners of the Long Parliament , in 1643 . between the choir and church , by which this desired 20 CARR'S STRANGER ,
... cathedrals it is always placed midway The ornaments of the churches of England experienced a similar fate from the commissioners of the Long Parliament , in 1643 . between the choir and church , by which this desired 20 CARR'S STRANGER ,
Page 21
William Fordyce Mavor. between the choir and church , by which this desired effect is lost.-St. Ouens is now opened for worship . After we left St. Ouens , we visited the square aux Vaux , where the celebrated heroine of Lorrain , Joan d ...
William Fordyce Mavor. between the choir and church , by which this desired effect is lost.-St. Ouens is now opened for worship . After we left St. Ouens , we visited the square aux Vaux , where the celebrated heroine of Lorrain , Joan d ...
Common terms and phrases
admirable adorned amongst Amsterdam ancient appearance ascended beautiful beheld boat brick building built Buonaparte canals carriage celebrated centre church colour consul copecs court covered Darmstadt delightful dinner displayed distance dress Dutch Dutch brick elegant emperor England English miles entered erected excellent exquisite favourite feet formed France Frankfort French frequently gardens Gatchina gloomy grand ground gulf of Finland Gustavus III Haarlem Hague handsome Holland honour horses hundred Husum imperial inhabitants king lady Leyden lofty Madame magnificent massy ment military Monsieur never noble o'clock observed officers painted palace Paris passed persons Petersburg Petit Trianon pile present prince prince primate principal prison resembling residence Rhine river road Robespierre Rotterdam Russian scene side sir Sidney soldiers spot Stadtholder streets stuccoed surprize Sweden taste theatre thousand tion town traveller trees vast versts visited walks whilst wood
Popular passages
Page 170 - Now came still evening on, and twilight gray Had in her sober livery all things clad ; Silence accompanied ; for beast and bird, They to their grassy couch, these to their nests Were slunk, all but the wakeful nightingale ; She all night long her amorous descant sung...
Page 122 - And want love's majesty To strut before a wanton ambling nymph ; I, that am curtail'd of this fair proportion, Cheated of feature by dissembling nature, Deform'd, unfinish'd, sent before my time Into this breathing world, scarce half made up...
Page 309 - The barge she sat in, like a burnish'd throne, Burn'd on the water: the poop was beaten gold ; Purple the sails, and so perfumed that The winds were love-sick with them : the oars were silver ; Which to the tune of flutes kept stroke, and made The water, which they beat, to follow faster, As amorous of their strokes.
Page 216 - Paul's apprehension, or anonymous information, suggested the idea, is not known, but conceiving that a storm was ready to burst upon him, he sent to count P , the governor of the city, one of the noblemen who had resolved on his destruction: " I am informed, P ," said the emperor, « that there is a conspiracy on foot against me ; do you think it " necessary to take any precaution ?" The count, without betraying the least emotion, replied, " Sire, do not suffer such apprehensions " to haunt your...
Page 215 - ... where they stood." His fate, which was fast approaching, prevented the accomplishment of this irretrievable act of delirium. The emperor and his family resided, at the time when the confederacy had resolved upon his removal, in the new palace of Saint Michael. It is an enormous quadrangular pile, of red Dutch...
Page 71 - Haste hither, Eve, and worth thy sight behold Eastward among those trees, what glorious shape Comes this way moving, seems another morn Risen on mid-noon ; some great behest from heaven To us perhaps he brings, and will vouchsafe This day to be our guest.
Page 216 - I am satisfied," said the emperor, and the governor withdrew. Before Paul retired to rest, he unexpectedly expressed the most tender solicitude for the Empress and his children, kissed them with all the warmth of farewell fondness, and remained with them longer than usual ; and after he had visited...
Page 217 - Finding that they fixed their eyes steadily and fiercely upon him, and continued advancing towards him, he implored them to spare his life, declared his consent instantly to relinquish the sceptre, and to accept of any terms which they would dictate. In his raving, he offered to make them princes, and to give them estates, and titles, and orders, without end, 1 hey now began to press upon him, when he made a convulsive effort to...
Page 218 - Upon which he took off his sash, turned it twice round the naked neck of the Emperor, and giving one end to Z , and holding the other himself, they pulled for a considerable time with all their force, until their miserable sovereign was no more. They then.
Page 119 - ... produced by music, when the instrument is brought in contact with their persons. We are told of a lady in Paris who tried an experiment upon a young woman who was both deaf and dumb. She fastened a silk thread about the girl's mouth, and rested the other end upon her pianoforte, upon which she played a pathetic air ; her visitor soon appeared much affected, and at length burst into tears. When she recovered, she wrote down upon a piece of paper that she had experienced a delight which she could...