The National Magazine, Volume 4Abel Stevens, James Floy Carlton & Phillips, 1854 |
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Page 30
... prisons at the " West end , ” — ye that begin and end the year in scraping together the fine dust of your pandemonium , know ye not that there are paradises still on the earth- paradises unguarded by flaming swords , and amid whose ...
... prisons at the " West end , ” — ye that begin and end the year in scraping together the fine dust of your pandemonium , know ye not that there are paradises still on the earth- paradises unguarded by flaming swords , and amid whose ...
Page 35
... prisoners , and chastising the infidels , but in reality with the object of obtaining spoil . The Cossack horsemen ... prisoners on the Turkish pontoons are to this day com- memorated in the national songs . The famous Dmitri Baïda was ...
... prisoners , and chastising the infidels , but in reality with the object of obtaining spoil . The Cossack horsemen ... prisoners on the Turkish pontoons are to this day com- memorated in the national songs . The famous Dmitri Baïda was ...
Page 36
... prisoners , their lives were spared , the bitterness of slavery arose not so much from the se- verities inflicted on them , as from the fact that they had no one to converse with about the Christian faith . Baïda refuses the daughter of ...
... prisoners , their lives were spared , the bitterness of slavery arose not so much from the se- verities inflicted on them , as from the fact that they had no one to converse with about the Christian faith . Baïda refuses the daughter of ...
Page 38
... prisoners , when , so great was their confidence in the power of the Czar , that the songs describe them expressing the hope that he would soon or- der the Turks to release them , otherwise ( the verse proceeds ) " the calm and glorious ...
... prisoners , when , so great was their confidence in the power of the Czar , that the songs describe them expressing the hope that he would soon or- der the Turks to release them , otherwise ( the verse proceeds ) " the calm and glorious ...
Page 44
... prisoners faring much as they had done the previous night . The next morning , after the horses had been brought out , and they were all ready to start , Grub went into the room to bring forth the prisoners . " Come , " said he to ...
... prisoners faring much as they had done the previous night . The next morning , after the horses had been brought out , and they were all ready to start , Grub went into the room to bring forth the prisoners . " Come , " said he to ...
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appeared beautiful Bishop of Puy Bohemund called Christian Church color Conrad Cossacks Count of Toulouse Crusaders dark death England English eyes father fear feel feet fire give Godfrey Godfrey of Bouillon ground hand head heard heart holy honor hope horses hour Huguenots hundred Indian interest Jerusalem Jews labor land Liberia light Little Russia living London looked ment miles mind moral morning mountains nature ness never New-York night painted passed Peter the Hermit poor Potiphar present prisoners pulpit reached reader river rock Rowland Hill Rudolph scene seemed seen sent sermon shekel ship side Sinope soon soul spirit things thou thought thousand tion took town traveler tree turn volume whole words write young