The Paradise of Birds: An Old Extravaganza in a Modern DressWilliam Blackwood, 1870 - 147 էջ |
Այլ խմբագրություններ - View all
The Paradise of Birds: An Old Extravaganza in a Modern Dress William John Courthope Ամբողջությամբ դիտվող - 1873 |
The Paradise of Birds: An Old Extravaganza in a Modern Dress William John Courthope Ամբողջությամբ դիտվող - 1870 |
The Paradise of Birds: An Old Extravaganza in a Modern Dress William John Courthope Ամբողջությամբ դիտվող - 1873 |
Common terms and phrases
Aristophanes beak Beasts bids bill biped BIRD OF PARADISE BLACKBIRD blackcap breeding bright brood chicken CHORUS claws clime cockchafer crimes crop cuckoo dark deesh delicate divine dwell earth Egg-Shell enter Exit SOUL extinct Fancy feathers Gilbert White GOLDFINCH GOOSE hatched hear heard heart Herodotus hither human iceberg invention JACKDAW JURY kings Kluk-uk-uk lapwing LARK laws Limbo LINNET lives Love lovers mankind MARESNEST nests never night NIGHTINGALE Numbers o'er obsolete once Origin of Species Ornithorhyncus PARADISE OF BIRDS Pee-weet penny press pigeons poet Polar Pole praise pre-Adamite Purgatory race rhymes Roc's Egg Rook round Salisbury Plain Seven-Dials shell silence Sinbad sing snow song SOUL OF BIRDCATCHER SOUL OF COOK SOUL OF LADY Sparrows species stars swallows swear sweet things thou thought THRUSH tongue unhatched wind WINDBAG windy wingless wings words ye birds Πόθεν τοῖς
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Էջ 145 - Memoir of Sir William Hamilton, Bart., Professor of Logic and Metaphysics in the University of Edinburgh. By Professor VEITCH of the University of Glasgow. 8vo, with Portrait, 18s.
Էջ 146 - Lectures on Metaphysics. By Sir WILLIAM HAMILTON, Bart., Professor of Logic and Metaphysics in the University of Edinburgh. Edited by the Rev.
Էջ 106 - We wish to declare how the Birds of the air all high Institutions designed, And holding in awe, art, science, and law, delivered the same to mankind. To begin with: of old Man went naked and cold whenever it pelted or froze, Till we showed him how feathers were proof against weathers ; with that he bethought him of hose.
Էջ 62 - ... demanding the release of one of his servants who had been detained there, but in reality to examine into the circumstances of the country, and the truth of the wonderful things told of it. When they returned to the presence of his majesty, they brought with them (as I have heard) a feather of the rukh, positively affirmed to have measured ninety spans, and the quill part to have been two palms in circumference. This surprising exhibition afforded his majesty extreme pleasure, and upon those by...
Էջ 145 - The Odes, Epodes, and Satires of Horace, Translated into English Verse, together with a Life of Horace. By THEODORE MARTIN. To this Edition (the Third of the Odes and Epodes) a Translation of the Satires has been for the first time added. Post 8vo, 9s. OTHER TRANSLATIONS BY THEODORE MARTIN : — Catullus. With Life and Notes. Post 8vo, 6s. 6d. Aladdin : A Dramatic Poem. 1 2 Messrs Biackwood and Sons
Էջ 108 - And men in their words acknowledge the birds' Erudition in weather and star ; For they say, " 'Twill be dry — the swallow is high ;" Or, " Rain — for the chough is afar.
Էջ 62 - The people of the island report that at a certain season of the year, an extraordinary kind of bird, which they call a rukh, makes its appearance from the southern region. In form it is said to resemble the eagle, but it is incomparably greater in size; being so large and strong as to seize an elephant with its talons, and to lift it into the air, from •whence it lets it fall to the ground, in order that when dead It may prey upon the carcase.
Էջ 50 - The largest of these walls is about equal in circumference to the city of Athens ; the battlements of the first circle are white, of the second black, of the third purple, of the fourth blue, of the fifth bright red. Thus the battlements of all the circles are painted with different colours ; but the two last have their battlements plaited, the one with silver, the other with gold.
Էջ 78 - Steam rails cut down each festive crown Of the old world and slow. Jack-in-the-green no more is seen, Nor Maypole in the street ; No mummers play on Christmas Day : St. George is obsolete. By no means the least serious trouble that we are suffering from is that love-making — " sweethearting " we call it among us — is positively dying out. The girls run away from us before the lads are old enough to take to
Էջ 145 - BULWER'S HORACE. The Odes and Epodes of Horace. A Metrical Translation into English. With Introduction and Commentaries. By LORD LYTTON. With Latin Text from the Editions of Orelli, Macleane, and Yonge.