Parley's Magazine, Volume 5C.S. Francis & Company, 1837 - Children's periodicals |
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... Sweet Lavender 284 Variety Wanted 26 Teeth 204 , 248 Veins 223 Tell - tale 33 Vesuvius and Pompeii 43,86 Zebra 336 Temperance Talc 211 Vindictive Monkey • 166 Alarm 137 Fabricius refusing Pyr- Mount Vesuvius 44 Ancient Scales.
... Sweet Lavender 284 Variety Wanted 26 Teeth 204 , 248 Veins 223 Tell - tale 33 Vesuvius and Pompeii 43,86 Zebra 336 Temperance Talc 211 Vindictive Monkey • 166 Alarm 137 Fabricius refusing Pyr- Mount Vesuvius 44 Ancient Scales.
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... Tell - tale 33 Curious Cascade Deserter Dog of St. Bernard Do not Deceive Yourself Durant's Ascension 353 Draper's Shop Eider Duck Fallen Painting 73 Match Box 83 Map of Niagara Falls Mongolfier's Balloon 63 Tiger 49 340 Topham , the ...
... Tell - tale 33 Curious Cascade Deserter Dog of St. Bernard Do not Deceive Yourself Durant's Ascension 353 Draper's Shop Eider Duck Fallen Painting 73 Match Box 83 Map of Niagara Falls Mongolfier's Balloon 63 Tiger 49 340 Topham , the ...
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... tell you what else . I should like to indulge my fancy a little farther . I should like to class this motley crowd , by directing the old to go to one part of the common ; the middle aged to another ; the young - the most we find a ...
... tell you what else . I should like to indulge my fancy a little farther . I should like to class this motley crowd , by directing the old to go to one part of the common ; the middle aged to another ; the young - the most we find a ...
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... tell us ; " O , I can't bear to have you engage jured during this sport ; and one boy whom I knew came very near losing his right eye . But the fault , in this case , was not in the snowball itself , so much as in the boy that threw it ...
... tell us ; " O , I can't bear to have you engage jured during this sport ; and one boy whom I knew came very near losing his right eye . But the fault , in this case , was not in the snowball itself , so much as in the boy that threw it ...
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... tell you that I spent the Sabbath within about a stone's throw of the house of my friend , whom I had wished to find . There was only a riv- er between us , but the ice in the river was in such a condition that there was no possibility ...
... tell you that I spent the Sabbath within about a stone's throw of the house of my friend , whom I had wished to find . There was only a riv- er between us , but the ice in the river was in such a condition that there was no possibility ...
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Common terms and phrases
AGNES STRICKLAND Amulius ANECDOTE animal Annawon appearance asked aunt balloon bank beautiful bird boat body Boston boys called Candiac church clothes cold curious danger dress eider duck Falls father feast feet fire fish friends girls give Goat Island grizzly bear hand happy harquebus Hawkseye heard heart Herculaneum horses hour hyæna Indians island kind king lady Lemuel Haynes letter live look LOWELL MASON Marbury miles morning mother mountain nest never NEWBURY Niagara Falls night once PARLEY'S MAGAZINE passed person picture Pompeii poor Pyrrhus readers RICHARD ROVER river rock Romulus and Remus Rosamond round seen ship shore side skin sometimes soon story stream tell things thou thought tion told took tree village walk water wheel wheel whole young
Popular passages
Page 182 - Then wherefore, wherefore were they made, All dyed with rainbow light, All fashioned with supremest grace Upspringing day and night : — Springing in valleys green and low. And on the mountains high, And in the silent wilderness Where no man passes by ? Our outward life requires them not — Then wherefore had they birth ? — : To minister delight to man, To beautify the earth ; To comfort man — to whisper hope, Whene'er his faith is dim, For who so careth for the flowers . Will much more care...
Page 117 - We were entertained with all love and kindness, and with as much bounty (after their manner) as they could possibly devise. We found the people most gentle, loving, and faithful, void of all guile and treason, and such as live after the manner of the golden age.
Page 167 - Woodman, spare that tree ! Touch not a single bough ! In youth it sheltered me, And I'll protect it now. 'Twas my forefather's hand That placed it near his cot; There, woodman, let it stand, Thy axe shall harm it not. That old familiar tree, Whose glory and renown Are spread o'er land and sea — And wouldst thou hew it down? Woodman, forbear thy stroke! Cut not its earth-bound ties ; Oh, spare that aged oak Now towering to the skies ! When but an idle boy, I sought its grateful shade; In all their...
Page 112 - COME, take up your hats, and away let us haste To the Butterfly's ball, and the Grasshopper's feast; The trumpeter Gadfly has summoned the crew, And the revels are now only waiting for you.
Page 167 - When but an idle boy, I sought its grateful shade; In all their gushing joy Here, too, my sisters played. My mother kissed me here; My father pressed my hand — Forgive this foolish tear, But let that old oak stand.
Page 149 - How great his power is, none can tell, Nor think how large his grace ; Not men below, nor saints that dwell On high before his face.
Page 78 - Captain Church and his handful of soldiers crept down also, under the shadow of those two and their baskets. The captain himself crept close behind the old man, with his hatchet in his hand, and stepped over the young man's head to the arms. The young Jlnnawon discovering him, whipped his blanket over his head, and shrunk up in a heap. The old Captain Annawon started up on his breech, and cried out
Page 89 - This land lay stretching itself to the West, which after we found to be but an island of twenty miles long, and not above six miles broad.
Page 88 - ... arrived upon the coast, which we supposed to be a continent and firm land, and we sailed along the same a hundred and twenty English miles before we could find any entrance or river issuing into the sea.
Page 88 - Which being performed, according to the ceremonies used in such enterprises, we viewed the land about us, being, whereas we first landed, very sandie and low towards the waters side, but so full of grapes, as the very beating and surge of the sea overflowed them...