The Atlantic Monthly, Band 18Atlantic Monthly Company, 1866 |
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Seite 64
... Normans still . The French are sensible of the difference , and do the Normans the honor ( as , if I were a Norman , I should think it ) of acknowl- edging it by habitual flouts and sneers at the " heavy " race who inhabit " the land of ...
... Normans still . The French are sensible of the difference , and do the Normans the honor ( as , if I were a Norman , I should think it ) of acknowl- edging it by habitual flouts and sneers at the " heavy " race who inhabit " the land of ...
Seite 74
... Norman style , and the great Norman Church of St. George de Boscherville , to Rouen . - Everybody knows Rouen and ... Normans , and bequeathed his heart to them . He did not bequeath it to Imperial France . With all his faults , he ...
... Norman style , and the great Norman Church of St. George de Boscherville , to Rouen . - Everybody knows Rouen and ... Normans , and bequeathed his heart to them . He did not bequeath it to Imperial France . With all his faults , he ...
Seite 462
... Normans ; and it may well be doubted if the Normans ever could have effected much in Eng- land had they not been preceded by the Danes . The Danes were Northmen , as are the Swedes and Norwegians . By Normans are meant the governing ...
... Normans ; and it may well be doubted if the Normans ever could have effected much in Eng- land had they not been preceded by the Danes . The Danes were Northmen , as are the Swedes and Norwegians . By Normans are meant the governing ...
Seite 463
... Normans , succeeded in establishing themselves in that coun- try . It was the French character of the Normans which rendered their sub- jugation of England so important an event , giving to it its peculiar signifi- cance , and causing ...
... Normans , succeeded in establishing themselves in that coun- try . It was the French character of the Normans which rendered their sub- jugation of England so important an event , giving to it its peculiar signifi- cance , and causing ...
Seite 464
... Normans . The phenomenon of the organs of speech yielding to social or moral influences , and losing the power of repeating certain sounds , was prominently observable amongst the Normans . No modern French gazette - writer could ...
... Normans . The phenomenon of the organs of speech yielding to social or moral influences , and losing the power of repeating certain sounds , was prominently observable amongst the Normans . No modern French gazette - writer could ...
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Adam Bede Amazons Aristippus arms asked Aunt Bannack beautiful better called child corpus delicti Creston door dress Elinor England Etruscan eyes face father feel feet Felix Holt Folly Island George Eliot George Neville girl give Griffith Gaunt ground hand head heard heart Hobert Island Jenny Killmany knew lady land leave live Long Island look ment Mercy mind morning mother nature ness never night Normandy Normans once Packhorse passed pedler person poor Prisoner Rephaim Rhoda river Ryder sandstone seemed seen side silk Sir George soul spiders spirit stood Sullivan's Island tained talk tell things Thomas Leicester thought Thucydides tion told took trees turned valley Vint walked whole wife woman women words young zonian