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 5
... thing in Spain , is suffering for want of repairs , both inside and out . The apartments appeared to me small , and wanting in the usual elegance which characterizes the abodes of royalty . Being a summer - residence , great labor and ...
... thing in Spain , is suffering for want of repairs , both inside and out . The apartments appeared to me small , and wanting in the usual elegance which characterizes the abodes of royalty . Being a summer - residence , great labor and ...
Page 10
... thing every month for ten years past . We went into the streets together . The town was quiet , the streets brilliantly illuminated , and the usual crowd of gay promenaders thronged the side- walks and filled the shops of fashionable ...
... thing every month for ten years past . We went into the streets together . The town was quiet , the streets brilliantly illuminated , and the usual crowd of gay promenaders thronged the side- walks and filled the shops of fashionable ...
Page 19
... thing awful is that ? The deluge is to come after some politicians , according to Prince METTERNICH and Lord MAIDSTONE . + The structure of this sentence does not make it quite clear whether the Eastern Prince was actually present to ...
... thing awful is that ? The deluge is to come after some politicians , according to Prince METTERNICH and Lord MAIDSTONE . + The structure of this sentence does not make it quite clear whether the Eastern Prince was actually present to ...
Page 20
... thing was beginning to take the character of a standing joke against them ; the two friends resolved to put an end to this by liquidating their engagement . Accord- ingly they sent out the above invitation . Now , ' said Rodolphe ...
... thing was beginning to take the character of a standing joke against them ; the two friends resolved to put an end to this by liquidating their engagement . Accord- ingly they sent out the above invitation . Now , ' said Rodolphe ...
Page 35
... thing for himself , without the patronage of Government or the protection of charters . His ability is equalled by his modesty ; quiet and unassuming , never acting a part to make himself conspicuous . ' With the exception of a chaplain ...
... thing for himself , without the patronage of Government or the protection of charters . His ability is equalled by his modesty ; quiet and unassuming , never acting a part to make himself conspicuous . ' With the exception of a chaplain ...
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Abencerrages appeared artist Baden Bayton beautiful beneath better BLIMMER called character CHARLES ASTOR BRISTED charming church clouds CURTIS GUILD daguerreotype daguerreotypist dark dear delight Doem door dream earth eyes face father fear feel feet flowers francs gaze gentleman give grave hand head heard heart heaven hour Hudson River John Biggs KNICKERBOCKER lady leaves light live look Marcel MARY DYER mind Moorish morning mother nature never New-York night o'er once passed Piermont pleasant pleasure poem pome poor present Puritans reader replied river Rodolphe rose round scene seemed seen Shanghai Simeon smile song soon soul Spain spirit stood sweet tears tell thee thing thou thought tion took tree turn Valdepeñas Venison voice volume walk wind wonder words young