Men and Manners in AmericaCarey, Lea & Blanchard, 1833 - 410 páginas |
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Página 4
... certainly have been more agreeable to the taste and habits of the writer . But when I found the institutions and experi- ence of the United States deliberately quoted in the reformed Parliament , as affording safe prece- dent for ...
... certainly have been more agreeable to the taste and habits of the writer . But when I found the institutions and experi- ence of the United States deliberately quoted in the reformed Parliament , as affording safe prece- dent for ...
Página 13
... certainly could detect nothing of that dogged , and almost sullen bre- vity , with which , I take it , the communications of En- glishmen , in similar circumstances , would have been marked . No one seemed to grudge the trouble neces ...
... certainly could detect nothing of that dogged , and almost sullen bre- vity , with which , I take it , the communications of En- glishmen , in similar circumstances , would have been marked . No one seemed to grudge the trouble neces ...
Página 14
... certainly forms a pleasing feature in the land- scape . The city stands on the southern extremity of York Island , and enlarging in latitude as it recedes from the apex of a triangle , stretches along the shores of the Hudson and East ...
... certainly forms a pleasing feature in the land- scape . The city stands on the southern extremity of York Island , and enlarging in latitude as it recedes from the apex of a triangle , stretches along the shores of the Hudson and East ...
Página 15
... certainly little to remind a traveller that the breadth of an ocean divides him from Great Britain . The fashions of dress generally adopted by the wealthier classes are those of Paris and London ; and the tastes and habits of the ...
... certainly little to remind a traveller that the breadth of an ocean divides him from Great Britain . The fashions of dress generally adopted by the wealthier classes are those of Paris and London ; and the tastes and habits of the ...
Página 16
... Certainly in no country of Europe is it usual to require an oath , in cases where it is not received as sufficient evidence of the fact deposed to ; and why the practice should be different , under a government so popular as that of the ...
... Certainly in no country of Europe is it usual to require an oath , in cases where it is not received as sufficient evidence of the fact deposed to ; and why the practice should be different , under a government so popular as that of the ...
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Términos y frases comunes
advantage afford American appearance beauty become better Boston Cambreleng certainly character Charleston circumstances coach comfortable Congress considerable constitution conversation course Court deliberative assembly dinner display doubt England English enjoy establishment evidently excited favour feeling Fort Mitchell fortune gentleman George Prevost Goat Island habits honour hour houses imagination impossible Indian influence inhabitants interests JOSEPH BONAPARTE journey labour ladies legislative legislature length less manner matter ment miles Milledgeville Mississippi Montreal moral morning nature nerally never night object observed opinion Orleans party passed passengers perhaps Philadelphia political population portion portmanteau prejudices present President principles prison probably Quebec racter regard river scene scenery seemed seen slave slavery society solitary confinement sort steam-boat streets talent taste ther thing tion traveller truth Union Unitarian United United States army voyage Washington whole York
Pasajes populares
Página 268 - But authoritative instructions; mandates issued, which the member is bound blindly and implicitly to obey, to vote, and to argue for, though contrary to the clearest conviction of his judgment and conscience, these are things utterly unknown to the laws of this land, and which arise from a fundamental mistake of the whole order and tenor of our Constitution.
Página 268 - But government and legislation are matters of reason and judgment, and not of inclination; and what sort of reason is that, in which the determination precedes the discussion; in which one set of men deliberate, and another decide; and where those who form the conclusion are perhaps three hundred miles distant from those who hear the arguments?
Página 21 - One nasty custom, however, I must notice. Eggs, instead of being eat from the shell, are poured into a wineglass, and after being duly and disgustingly churned up with butter and condiment, the mixture, according to its degree of fluidity, is forthwith either spooned into the mouth, or drunk off like a liquid. The advantage gained by this unpleasant process, I do not profess to be qualified to appreciate, but I can speak from experience, to its sedative effect on the appetite of an unpractised beholder.
Página 267 - But, his unbiassed opinion, his mature judgment, his enlightened conscience, he ought not to sacrifice to you ; to any man, or to any set of men living.
Página 306 - I have never experienced before or since. Conversation became odious, and I passed my time in a sort of dreamy contemplation. At night, I ascended to the highest deck, and lay for hours gazing listlessly on the sky, the forest, and the waters, amid silence only broken by the clanging of the engine.
Página 302 - But, in the neighbourhood of the Mississippi, there is, almost uniformly, a thick undergrowth of cane, varying in height from four or five to about twenty feet, according to the richness of the soil. Through this thicket of cane, I should think it quite impossible to penetrate ; yet, I have been assured, the Indians do so for leagues together, though by what means they contrive to guide their course, where vision is manifestly impossible, it is not easy to understand. It has been the fashion with...
Página 129 - Unless the present progress of change be arrested, by an increase of taste and judgment in the more educated classes, there can be no doubt that, in another century, the dialect of the Americans will become utterly unintelligible to an Englishman, and that the nation will be cut off from the advantages arising from their participation in British literature. If they contemplate such an event with complacency, let them go on and prosper; they have only to "progress...
Página 306 - The navigation of the Mississippi is not unaccompanied by danger, rising from what are called planters and sawyers. These are trees firmly fixed in the bottom of the river, by which vessels are in danger of being impaled.
Página 308 - One of the most striking circumstances connected with this river-voyage was the rapid change of climate. Barely ten days had elapsed since I was traversing mountains almost impassable from snow. Even the level country was partially covered with it, and the approach of spring had not been heralded by any symptom of vegetation.