Evenings at Home, Or, The Juvenile Budget Opened: Consisting of a Variety of Miscellaneous Pieces for the Instruction and Amusement of Young PersonsBaldwin, Cradock, and Joy, and R. Hunter, successor to J. Johnson, 1819 - Children |
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Page 29
... necessary to the production of so large a quantity of the stuff ' as I saw used . This people are very fantastic in their dress , especially the women , whose apparel consists of a great number of articles impossible to be described ...
... necessary to the production of so large a quantity of the stuff ' as I saw used . This people are very fantastic in their dress , especially the women , whose apparel consists of a great number of articles impossible to be described ...
Page 58
... wrong in us to lay out so much on this ac count as would oblige us to spare in more necessary articles , as in their edu cation , and the common household ex- pences required in our way of living . Besides , 58 SECOND EVENING .
... wrong in us to lay out so much on this ac count as would oblige us to spare in more necessary articles , as in their edu cation , and the common household ex- pences required in our way of living . Besides , 58 SECOND EVENING .
Page 59
... necessary clothes will then cost more , you know . Then if we were now to hire a coach or chair for you to go a visiting in , should you like to leave it off ever afterwards ? But you have no reason to expect that you will be able to ...
... necessary clothes will then cost more , you know . Then if we were now to hire a coach or chair for you to go a visiting in , should you like to leave it off ever afterwards ? But you have no reason to expect that you will be able to ...
Page 87
... necessary for them to do . M. That's very true , but all things are not equally necessary to every one ; but some that are very fit for one , are scarcely proper at all for others . K. Why , mamma ? M. Because , my dear , it is the pur ...
... necessary for them to do . M. That's very true , but all things are not equally necessary to every one ; but some that are very fit for one , are scarcely proper at all for others . K. Why , mamma ? M. Because , my dear , it is the pur ...
Page 89
... necessary duty ; and besides this , I must go out a visiting to keep up our acquaintance ; this I call partly business , and partly amusement . Then when I am tired , and have done all that I think necessary , I may amuse myself with ...
... necessary duty ; and besides this , I must go out a visiting to keep up our acquaintance ; this I call partly business , and partly amusement . Then when I am tired , and have done all that I think necessary , I may amuse myself with ...
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Common terms and phrases
acorns Alfred animal Beaum beautiful bees Betty birds body Bolt Court Borrowdale brought called Canute cloth colour companions corn creature dare say deal dear earth elephant Fairborne Fanny father fell fire flax Fleet Street flowers friends Gandelin give grass Greenlanders ground grow Gubba hand Harf head heard hole honour horse Indur John JUVENILE BUDGET OPENED kind Landl leaves length liquor live look lord mamma Manufacture Mary master means mother nature neighbouring nest never obliged Offa papa perly Pine plants poor Pray quadruped Rookery Sally seeds ships side soon sort spirit spirit of wine suppose sure sweet swim tell thing thought tion Tom Hardy took trees tribe walk wine wings wood young
Popular passages
Page 152 - And what is a conqueror ? Have not you, too, gone about the earth like an evil genius, blasting the fair fruits of peace and industry ; plundering, ravaging, killing, without law, without justice, merely to gratify an insatiable lust for dominion...
Page 150 - I don't mind it much, for my mammy gives me a pie now and then, and that is as good. Mr. L. Would you not like a knife, to cut sticks ? B. I have one, here it is.
Page 31 - pray what are coals but stones ; and is not butter, grease ; and corn, seeds ; and leather, skins ; and silk, the web of a kind of caterpillar ; and may we not as well call a cat an animal of the tiger kind, as a tiger an animal of the cat kind...
Page 152 - And does not Fame speak of me too ? Was there ever a bolder captain of a more valiant band ? Was there ever — but I scorn to boast.
Page 153 - If I have burned a few hamlets, you have desolated the most flourishing kingdoms and cities of the earth. What is then the difference, but that...
Page 150 - Hast thou not set at defiance my authority ; violated the public peace ; and passed thy life in injuring the persons and properties of thy fellowsubjects ? ROBBER.
Page 149 - No, sir ; but our Tom makes footballs, to kick in the cold weather, and we set traps for birds ; and then I have a...
Page 73 - His spear, — to equal which, the tallest pine Hewn on Norwegian hills, to be the mast Of some great ammiral, were but a wand...
Page 161 - I have no allurements to tempt you with, like those of my gay rival. Instead of spending all your time in amusements, if you enter yourself of my train, you must rise early, and pass the long day in a variety of employments, some of them difficult, some laborious, and all requiring some exertion of body or mind.
Page 153 - But if I have taken like a king, I have given like a king. If I have subverted empires, I have founded greater.