| Herbert Byng Hall - 1837 - 358 páginas
...short months would terminate the desperate struggle in their favour. STATE OF THE DEPOT. CHAPTER XIX. Lives there a man with soul so dead, Who never to himself has said, ' This is my own — my native land !' Returning from a foreign strand ? WALTER SCOTT. IF such there... | |
| George Cruikshank - 1841 - 390 páginas
...they cannot name the author robbed. One cries, Spenser; another, Butler ; a third, Collins. \\" '• repeat, it is the fate of Originality. " Garth did...to himself has said, "Shoot folly as it flies?" Oh I more than tears of blood can tell, Are in that word farewell, farewell I 'Tis folly to be wise. And... | |
| Edward Everett - 1848 - 586 páginas
...strong proof. They are not ashamed of the State which gave them birth. Indeed, though rocky as Ithaca, " Lives there a man with soul so dead, Who never to himself has said, This is my own, my native land." Within the space of a few months, I once visited every State in the... | |
| 1850 - 196 páginas
...strong proof. They are not ashamed of the State which gave them birth. Indeed, though rocky as Ithaca, " Lives there a man with soul so dead, Who never to himself has said, This is my own, my native land." Within the space of a few months, I once visited every State in the... | |
| Levi Woodbury - 1852 - 450 páginas
...strong proof. They are not ashamed of the State which gave them birth. Indeed, though rocky as Ithaca, " Lives there a man with soul so dead, Who never to himself has said. This is my own, my native land ?" Within the space of a few months I once visited every State in the... | |
| Marcus Tullius Cicero - 1861 - 250 páginas
...p. 536. 6. § 66 : rls OVTUÍ r¡ т/S ODтUÍ ¿e\dt iffriv &irru ¿(tiix &v . dva\äirai ; So: ' Lives there a man with soul so dead, Who never to himself has said . . ?'] c. xiv. § 34. [1. 30. «e non. Madvig, § 376. Hand Tursel1. Iv. 49. Cic. Verr. iv. § 82... | |
| George Rhett Cathcart - 1871 - 200 páginas
...St. Lawrence to the Gulf, washed by the Atlantic and the Pacific, yet hangs upon the verge of ruin. " Lives there a man, with soul so dead, Who never to himself has said — " Sly. Louder ! Slow, (louder). I say, " Lives there a man — " Sly. Louder ! Slow. I '11 just... | |
| George Melville Baker - 1876 - 158 páginas
...Lawrence to the Gulf, washed by the Atlantic and the Pacific, yet hangs upon the verge of ruin. * " Lives there a man, with soul so dead, • Who never to himself has said — " Sly. Louder! Slow, (Louder.) I say, — • " Lives there a man — " Sly. Louder! Slow. I'll... | |
| Oliver Optic - 1868 - 868 páginas
...St. Lawrence to the Gulf, washed by the Atlantic and the Pacific, yet hangs upon the verge of ruin. " Lives there a man, with soul so dead, Who never to himself has said — " Sly. Louder! Slow. (Louder.*) I say, — " Lives there a man — " Sly. Louder! Slow. I'll just... | |
| Charles Carroll Bombaugh - 1874 - 876 páginas
...Breathes there a man with soul so dead, Who never to himself hath said, Shoot folly as it Hies? Ah, more than tears of blood can tell, Are in that word...to be wise. And what is Friendship but a name That burns on Etna's breast of tiaine? Thus runs the world away. Sweet is the ship that's under sail To... | |
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