The Knickerbocker: Or, New-York Monthly Magazine, Volume 42Charles Fenno Hoffman, Timothy Flint, Lewis Gaylord Clark, Kinahan Cornwallis, John Holmes Agnew 1853 |
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Page 3
... seen in all the vast extended plain ; while the ruins of temples and churches , that every where met the eye , brought to the mind the sad lesson of the instability of all earthly things . My first view of the cathedral of Toledo was ...
... seen in all the vast extended plain ; while the ruins of temples and churches , that every where met the eye , brought to the mind the sad lesson of the instability of all earthly things . My first view of the cathedral of Toledo was ...
Page 5
... seen in this almost treeless land ; they are said to have been brought from England by Philip II . The ornaments of art are in bad taste , and entirely unworthy of the garden . The fountains are mean in comparison with those at Madrid ...
... seen in this almost treeless land ; they are said to have been brought from England by Philip II . The ornaments of art are in bad taste , and entirely unworthy of the garden . The fountains are mean in comparison with those at Madrid ...
Page 34
... seen and felt in the various quarters of Europe where the steamer ' North Star ' shall unfurl the flag of our country . ' Mr. VANDERBILT has been , as we have seen , entirely the architect of his own fortunes . Amassing immense wealth ...
... seen and felt in the various quarters of Europe where the steamer ' North Star ' shall unfurl the flag of our country . ' Mr. VANDERBILT has been , as we have seen , entirely the architect of his own fortunes . Amassing immense wealth ...
Page 41
... seen the lips of the blessed Prophet pressed upon those which you now contemn ! ' How often have I pressed those lips of my poor little brother to mine , which have long since crumbled to dust in the grave ! ' I remember my little ...
... seen the lips of the blessed Prophet pressed upon those which you now contemn ! ' How often have I pressed those lips of my poor little brother to mine , which have long since crumbled to dust in the grave ! ' I remember my little ...
Page 42
... seen but once , to enthral all my affections , and occupy and lead my mind as if some ethereal being . I knew that even to entertain an attachment other than of respectful devo- tion to her service , was a fault which merited the ...
... seen but once , to enthral all my affections , and occupy and lead my mind as if some ethereal being . I knew that even to entertain an attachment other than of respectful devo- tion to her service , was a fault which merited the ...
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