Israel Potter: His Fifty Years of Exile, Volume 231 |
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Page 18
... stood ready to march anywhere at a minute's warning . Israel , for the last eight months , sojourning as a labourer on a farm in Windsor , enrolled himself in the regiment of Colonel John Patterson , of Lenox , afterwards General ...
... stood ready to march anywhere at a minute's warning . Israel , for the last eight months , sojourning as a labourer on a farm in Windsor , enrolled himself in the regiment of Colonel John Patterson , of Lenox , afterwards General ...
Page 29
... stood a fair chance . Revived a little by this prospect of relief , Israel starts in quest of the gentleman's seat , agreeably to the direction received . But he mistook his way , and proceeding up a gravelled and beautifully decorated ...
... stood a fair chance . Revived a little by this prospect of relief , Israel starts in quest of the gentleman's seat , agreeably to the direction received . But he mistook his way , and proceeding up a gravelled and beautifully decorated ...
Page 35
... stood frozen to the ground . ' You are a Yankee - a Yankee , " said the king again in his rapid and half - stammering way . Again Israel essayed to reply , but could not . What could he say ? Could he lie to a king ? 66 Yes , yes , you ...
... stood frozen to the ground . ' You are a Yankee - a Yankee , " said the king again in his rapid and half - stammering way . Again Israel essayed to reply , but could not . What could he say ? Could he lie to a king ? 66 Yes , yes , you ...
Page 36
... stood with mute respect before him . The king , turning suddenly , walked rapidly away from Israel a moment , but presently returning with a less hasty pace , said , " You are rumoured to be a spy - a spy , or something of that sort ...
... stood with mute respect before him . The king , turning suddenly , walked rapidly away from Israel a moment , but presently returning with a less hasty pace , said , " You are rumoured to be a spy - a spy , or something of that sort ...
Page 38
... squire ; who opening the door in person , and learning who it was that stood there , at once assured Israel in the most solemn manner , that no foul play was intended . So the wanderer suffered himself to enter , and be 38 ISRAEL POTTER .
... squire ; who opening the door in person , and learning who it was that stood there , at once assured Israel in the most solemn manner , that no foul play was intended . So the wanderer suffered himself to enter , and be 38 ISRAEL POTTER .
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Common terms and phrases
adventurer ain't American boat boots breeches Brentford Captain Paul Carrickfergus cloth gilt cloth lettered coat crew cried cutter deck Doctor Franklin door Edition enemy England English ere long farmer Fcap fire Flamborough Head forecastle gentleman George Cruikshank guns hail hand heard heart HENRY COCKTON honest friend honour Horne Tooke hurried Illustrations Israel Potter king lady land Latin Quarter London look master-at-arms miles morning never nigh night officer once Paris passed Paul Jones Pont Neuf poor Israel Poor Richard port present Price prisoner Ranger replied Israel retreat round sage sail sailor Scotch bonnet seemed Serapis ship side soldiers sort soul Squire Woodcock squire's stood strange stranger suddenly thought turned UNCLE TOM'S CABIN VALENTINE VOX vessels vols wanderer White Waltham Whitehaven wind wood Yankee
Popular passages
Page 59 - Industry need not wish, as Poor Richard says, and he that lives upon Hope will die fasting. There are no Gains without Pains; then Help, Hands, for I have no Lands, or if I have, they are smartly taxed.
Page 124 - So that a man shall say, Verily there is a reward for the righteous : verily he is a God that judgeth in the earth.
Page 9 - ... some renowned structure, a palace, a prison, or a fortress. It is thus with the * Tower of London,' ' Windsor Castle,'
Page 155 - He was frank; bluff; companionable as a Pagan; convivial; a -Roman; hearty as a harvest. His spirit was essentially western; and herein is his peculiar Americanism; for the western spirit is, or will yet be (for no other is, or can be) the true American one.
Page 125 - Sharing the same blood with England, and yet her proved foe in two wars — not wholly inclined at bottom to forget an old grudge — intrepid, unprincipled, reckless, predatory, with boundless ambition, civilized in externals but a savage at heart, America is, or may yet be, the Paul Jones of nations.
Page 164 - Hung in long, sepulchral arches of stone, the black, besmoked bridge seemed a huge scarf of crape, festooning the river across. Similar funeral festoons spanned it to the west, while eastward, towards the sea, tiers and tiers of jetty colliers lay moored, side by side, fleets of black swans. The Thames, which far away, among the green fields of Berks, ran clear as a brook, here, polluted by continual vicinity to man, curdled on between rotten wharves, one murky sheet of sewerage.
Page 7 - ... images of guilt and woe, they so clear our judgment by profound analysis, while they move our hearts by terror or compassion, that we learn to detect and stifle in ourselves the evil thought which we see gradually unfolding itself into the guilty deed.
Page 128 - Prudence dictated the step; because several chance shot — from which of the combatants could not be known — had already struck the Scarborough. So, unwilling uselessly to expose herself, off went for the present this baffled and ineffectual friend. Not long after, an invisible hand came and set down a great yellow lamp in the east. The hand reached up unseen from below the horizon, and set the lamp down right on the rim of the horizon, as on a threshold; as much as to say, Gentlemen warriors,...
Page 133 - These words were spoken by Paul to Israel. Israel did as ordered. In a few minutes, bucket in hand, begrimed with powder, sixty feet in air, he hung like Apollyon from the extreme tip of the yard over the fated abyss of the hatchway. As he looked down between the eddies of smoke into that slaughterous pit, it was like looking from the verge of a cataract down into the yeasty pool at its base. Watching his chance, he dropped one grenade with such faultless precision, that, striking its mark, an explosion...
Page 7 - ... art ; here — lively and sparkling fancies; there, vigorous passion or practical wisdom — these works abound in illustrations that teach benevolence to the rich, and courage to the poor ; they glow with the love of freedom ; they speak a sympathy with all high aspirations, and all manly...