The Atlantic Monthly, Band 43Atlantic Monthly Company, 1857 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 73
Seite 178
... French calm . I say French calm , because French calmness and En- glish calmness have points of difference . He was moving swiftly back and forth among the débris of his furniture , now and then staving chance fragments of it across the ...
... French calm . I say French calm , because French calmness and En- glish calmness have points of difference . He was moving swiftly back and forth among the débris of his furniture , now and then staving chance fragments of it across the ...
Seite 252
... French must be changing ; that is , the Parisians , for in matters of lit- erature and art Paris is France . Lon- don is by no means England , and New York not quite America ; but Paris is France . A little while ago we had their Dosia ...
... French must be changing ; that is , the Parisians , for in matters of lit- erature and art Paris is France . Lon- don is by no means England , and New York not quite America ; but Paris is France . A little while ago we had their Dosia ...
Seite 294
most French shop - keepers , lived on the ground - floor , and was glad to let the first and second floors , comprising some ele- gant apartments , to English families , who swarm over to Calais in the summer season for sea - bathing .
most French shop - keepers , lived on the ground - floor , and was glad to let the first and second floors , comprising some ele- gant apartments , to English families , who swarm over to Calais in the summer season for sea - bathing .
Inhalt
Abolition of Poverty | 1 |
Labor and the Natural Forces | 9 |
Clarence Cook | 41 |
21 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Alatri American asked Bayard Taylor beautiful better Bill Webster called Champfleury character charming church civil course dear Deukalion Dunham England English Erwin eyes face faïence feel French G. P. Putnam's Sons girl give glish hand head heart Hicks ical Ingleside interest Irene labor lady land laughed Leadville less literary live looked Lydia Lydia looked means ment mind Miss Ruck mother nature never night Obed once passed Payson perhaps person pict play poems poet political poor preemption law pretty quern-stones Rosamond Rutland seemed smile sort speak Staniford story Street suppose sure talk tell thing thought tion turned universal suffrage Venice Vries walk wife woman women word writing York young