The Monthly ReviewHurst, Robinson, 1830 |
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Página 8
... able to discover any great novelty in them . We shall therefore pass over this part of the book , and proceed at once with our traveller to the interesting coast of Egypt , where he arrived in January , 1819. In walking through the ...
... able to discover any great novelty in them . We shall therefore pass over this part of the book , and proceed at once with our traveller to the interesting coast of Egypt , where he arrived in January , 1819. In walking through the ...
Página 8
... able to collect some important information connected with it . We much regret that points of this description are not more con- sidered by our travellers ; we do not send able and acute persons every day to such places as Egypt ; and ...
... able to collect some important information connected with it . We much regret that points of this description are not more con- sidered by our travellers ; we do not send able and acute persons every day to such places as Egypt ; and ...
Página 8
... able . The procession conducts the bridegroom to his own house ; after which he escapes to that of the bride , leaving his companions to continue their revelry , which is generally kept up in the same way , -dancing , shouting ...
... able . The procession conducts the bridegroom to his own house ; after which he escapes to that of the bride , leaving his companions to continue their revelry , which is generally kept up in the same way , -dancing , shouting ...
Página 12
... able squalid - looking objects that I ever beheld , whose dirty rags seemed ill - suited to the place and the occasion . On my asking " how they came there without a wedding garment ? " I was told that they were poor sick women , who ...
... able squalid - looking objects that I ever beheld , whose dirty rags seemed ill - suited to the place and the occasion . On my asking " how they came there without a wedding garment ? " I was told that they were poor sick women , who ...
Página 18
... able to penetrate with equal facility into the researches of the dead , and the motives and actions of the living : he must be able to wield at his pleasure all the splendours of rhe- toric and eloquence , and to descend in a moment ...
... able to penetrate with equal facility into the researches of the dead , and the motives and actions of the living : he must be able to wield at his pleasure all the splendours of rhe- toric and eloquence , and to descend in a moment ...
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Acarnania amongst amusing animals appears attention bear beautiful Bedouin believe Bentley better body Brazil called Chamonix character Charles Lamb church circumstances climate colour Constantinople doubt effect England English eyes father favour feelings friends give Greece Greek Haiti hand head heard heart honour hope India inhabitants interesting Jenné Jews labour lady living London look Lord Lord Byron Lymington Mandingoes manner marriage means ment mind Mont Blanc morning mountains Naples nature never night object observed occasion Odessa party passed perhaps person Petersburgh poem Port-au-Prince possess present racter reader reason remarkable respect Romano round Russia scene Schidoni Scotland seems shew side soon Sotheby spirit Sweden thing thou thought Timbuctoo tion town traveller verst vols volume whole wife women young