Some Account of the Life of Reginald HeberCrocker and Brewster, 1829 - 244 pages |
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Page 39
... usual , excessively sanguine , and confident of the success of their scheme ; and we heard a direct contrary story to the one we were taught at Taganrog . We could not learn whether Arabat had a safe harbour : the road from Kaffa ...
... usual , excessively sanguine , and confident of the success of their scheme ; and we heard a direct contrary story to the one we were taught at Taganrog . We could not learn whether Arabat had a safe harbour : the road from Kaffa ...
Page 60
... usual line of conduct , when he permitted little Philip to attend the Rector's school . Why not ? ' was the old man's reply ; ' d'ye think I wish Phil to be as bad as my- self ? I'm black enough , God knows ! ' 6 " The old man was taken ...
... usual line of conduct , when he permitted little Philip to attend the Rector's school . Why not ? ' was the old man's reply ; ' d'ye think I wish Phil to be as bad as my- self ? I'm black enough , God knows ! ' 6 " The old man was taken ...
Page 103
Reginald Heber. much of my past life , I have enjoyed a more than usual share of earthly comfort and pros- perity ; I cannot bid adieu to those , with whose idea almost every recollection of past happiness is connected , without many ...
Reginald Heber. much of my past life , I have enjoyed a more than usual share of earthly comfort and pros- perity ; I cannot bid adieu to those , with whose idea almost every recollection of past happiness is connected , without many ...
Page 114
... usual beautiful tints of crimson , flame - colour , & c . , which the clouds displayed , and which were strangely contrasted with the deep blue of the sea , and the lighter , but equally beautiful blue of the sky , there were in the ...
... usual beautiful tints of crimson , flame - colour , & c . , which the clouds displayed , and which were strangely contrasted with the deep blue of the sea , and the lighter , but equally beautiful blue of the sky , there were in the ...
Page 137
... usual military salute ; then , instead of the offering of money which each of the rest made , he bared a small part of the blade of his sabre , and held it out to the governor . The attar he received , not on his handkerchief , but on ...
... usual military salute ; then , instead of the offering of money which each of the rest made , he bared a small part of the blade of his sabre , and held it out to the governor . The attar he received , not on his handkerchief , but on ...
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Common terms and phrases
abrock ancient appearance asked Ataman beautiful believe Benares better Bishop Heber Bishop of Calcutta Bombay boys Brahmins called caste character Cherson Christian church colour comfort Cossacks Crimea Dacca degree delight desert districts duty England English European expressed faith father favourable feeling friends give Gospel habits hand heard heart Hindoo Hodnet holy honour hope horses houses India inhabitants interesting Jeremy Taylor Kaffa Kertch kind labour land less Lord magnificent manner master ment mind missionaries Mussulman native natural neighbourhood never noble Nogay observed Odessa officers Pallas passed peasants perhaps Persian persons pleased possession preached present prince racter Raja Rajah rank received REGINALD HEBER religious roubles round ruins Russian says seemed seen servants silver sticks slaves Starosta Sudak suppose Taganrog Tahtars temples things thought tion told town traveller tygers versts village writings
Popular passages
Page 68 - GOD, that madest earth and heaven, darkness and light; who the day for toil hast given, for rest the night; may thine angel-guards defend us, slumber sweet thy mercy send us, holy dreams and hopes attend us, this livelong night.
Page 161 - An Evening Walk in Bengal. Our task is done ! on Gunga's breast The sun is sinking down to rest; And, moored beneath the tamarind bough, Our bark has found its harbour now. With furled sail and painted side Behold the tiny frigate ride. Upon her deck, 'mid charcoal gleams, The Moslem's savoury supper steams ; While all apart, beneath the wood, The Hindoo cooks his simpler food.
Page 163 - Whose plumes the dames of Ava prize. So rich a shade, so green a sod, Our English fairies never trod. Yet who in Indian bower has stood, But thought on England's "good green wood?
Page 159 - If thou wert by my side, my love ! How fast would evening fail In green Bengala's palmy grove, Listening the nightingale ! ' If thou, my love ! wert by my side, My babies at my knee, How gaily would our pinnace glide O'er Gunga's mimic sea...
Page 62 - We meekly beseech thee, O Father, to raise us from the death of sin unto the life of righteousness ; that, when we shall depart this life, we may rest in him, as our hope is this our brother doth...
Page 166 - A species of litter. material of the buildings is a very good stone, from Chunar, but the Hindoos here seem fond of painting them a deep red colour, and, indeed, of covering the more conspicuous parts of their houses with paintings in gaudy colours of flower-pots, men, women, bulls, elephants, gods and goddesses, in all their many-formed, manyheaded, many-handed, and many-weaponed varieties.
Page 210 - Hindostanee language, as well as Persian and Arabic, the senior boys could pass a good examination in English grammar, in Hume's History of England, Joyce's Scientific Dialogues, the use of the globes, and the principal facts and moral precepts of the Gospel, most of them writing beautifully in the Persian, and very tolerably in the English, character, and excelling most boys I have met with in the accuracy and readiness of their arithmetic.
Page 161 - mid charcoal gleams, The Moslems' savoury supper steams. While all apart, beneath the wood, The Hindoo cooks his simpler food. Come walk with me the jungle through; If yonder hunter told us true, Far off, in desert dank and rude, The...
Page 228 - ... (employments which he never sought for, but which fell in his way) he never pretended to impartiality, but acted as the avowed, though, certainly, the successful and judicious agent of the orphan prince entrusted to his care, and from attempting whose conversion to Christianity he seems to have abstained from a feeling of honour. His other converts were between six and seven thousand, besides those which his predecessors and companions in the cause had brought over.
Page 85 - ... whether he describes the duties, or dangers, or hopes of man, or the mercy, power, and justice of the Most High ; whether he exhorts or instructs his brethren, or offers up his supplications in their behalf to the common Father of all, his conceptions and his expressions belong to the loftiest and most sacred description of poetry, of which they only want, what they cannot be said to need, the name and the metrical arrangement.