La Belle Assemblée, Volume 18J. Bell, 1818 |
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Page 2
... Deaths ............... 48 40 TO CORRESPONDENTS . THE extreme pressure of New Publications which we have been requested to review , will com- pel us only to notice those of the lighter sort in our monthly Numbers - Works that are either ...
... Deaths ............... 48 40 TO CORRESPONDENTS . THE extreme pressure of New Publications which we have been requested to review , will com- pel us only to notice those of the lighter sort in our monthly Numbers - Works that are either ...
Page 6
... death . Her poetry had all the neatness , humour , and gaiety of Swift ; and her wit and vivacity rendered her society and conversation a perpetual treat . The following anecdote serves to shew that this sprightliness attended her ...
... death . Her poetry had all the neatness , humour , and gaiety of Swift ; and her wit and vivacity rendered her society and conversation a perpetual treat . The following anecdote serves to shew that this sprightliness attended her ...
Page 7
... death of his own father , and calling upon his coy mistress there , he found her father dying . He passed all bis leisure hours at Mr. Porter's , attending his sick - bed , and , in a few months after his death , asked Mrs. Johnson's ...
... death of his own father , and calling upon his coy mistress there , he found her father dying . He passed all bis leisure hours at Mr. Porter's , attending his sick - bed , and , in a few months after his death , asked Mrs. Johnson's ...
Page 11
... death . The timber - work on the outside that apostle of England founded a mo- was covered with plates of gold , damasked nastery at Canterbury , and dedicated it with gold wire , which ground of gold was to our saviour Christ . The ...
... death . The timber - work on the outside that apostle of England founded a mo- was covered with plates of gold , damasked nastery at Canterbury , and dedicated it with gold wire , which ground of gold was to our saviour Christ . The ...
Page 12
... death to the unhappy people who are wrecked on them at low water : they often pass , with horrible view , the intermediate space between their getting on the sands and the return of the tide if they chance to be seen from laud , and a ...
... death to the unhappy people who are wrecked on them at low water : they often pass , with horrible view , the intermediate space between their getting on the sands and the return of the tide if they chance to be seen from laud , and a ...
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Popular passages
Page 58 - The growth of coral appears to cease when the worm is no longer exposed to the washing of the sea. Thus a reef rises in the form of a cauliflower, till its top has gained the level of the highest tides, above which the worm has no power to advance, and the reef of course no longer extends itself upwards. The...
Page 112 - Now nature is not at variance with art, nor art with nature ; they being both servants of his providence. Art is the perfection of nature. Were the world now as it was the sixth day, there were yet a chaos. Nature hath made one world, and art another. In brief, all things are artificial ; for nature is the art of God...
Page 233 - Mecklenburg with desolation. I know, Sire, that it seems unbecoming my sex, in this age of vicious refinement, to feel for one's country, to lament the horrors of war, or wish for the return of peace. I know you may think it more properly my province to study the...
Page 178 - There is a mystic thread of life So dearly wreathed with mine alone, That destiny's relentless knife At once must sever both or none. There is a form on which these eyes Have often gazed with fond delight ; By day that form their joy supplies, And dreams restore it through the night. There is...
Page 56 - Come, my friends, we will drink together. It is now forty years since I worked like you, at this Press, as a journeyman Printer.
Page 58 - The examination of a coral reef, during the different stages of one tide, is particularly interesting. When the tide has left it for some time, it becomes dry, and appears to be a compact rock, exceedingly hard and...
Page 319 - I returned home almost in desperation. When I opened the door of my study, where Lavater alone could have found a library, the first object which presented itself was an immense folio of a brief, twenty golden guineas wrapped up beside it, and the name of Old Bob Lyons marked upon the back of it. I paid my landlady — bought a good dinner — gave Bob Lyons a share of it — and that dinner was the date of my prosperity.
Page 58 - ... invisible. These animals are of a great variety of shapes and sizes, and in such prodigious numbers, that, in a short time, the whole surface of the rock appears to be alive and in motion. The most common...