American Literature: From the beginning to 1860.-v. 2. From 1860 to the presentC. Scribner's Sons, 1948 |
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... never was any con- siderable change wrought in the mind or conversation of any person by anything of a religious nature that ever he read , heard , or saw , that had not his affections moved . Never was a natural man engaged earnestly ...
... never was any con- siderable change wrought in the mind or conversation of any person by anything of a religious nature that ever he read , heard , or saw , that had not his affections moved . Never was a natural man engaged earnestly ...
622 psl.
... never did shoot at but one , and I'd never forgiven myself for that , had it weighed less than forty pounds . I wouldn't draw a rifle on any thing less than that ; and when I meet with another wild turkey of the same weight I will drap ...
... never did shoot at but one , and I'd never forgiven myself for that , had it weighed less than forty pounds . I wouldn't draw a rifle on any thing less than that ; and when I meet with another wild turkey of the same weight I will drap ...
867 psl.
... never propose to make an effort ; I have never countenanced an ef- fort , and never mean to countenance an effort , to disturb the arrangement as origi- nally made , by which the various States came into the Union . " Still thinking of ...
... never propose to make an effort ; I have never countenanced an ef- fort , and never mean to countenance an effort , to disturb the arrangement as origi- nally made , by which the various States came into the Union . " Still thinking of ...
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American Literature: From the beginning to 1860.-v. 2. From 1860 to the present John Towner Frederick Trumpų ištraukų rodinys - 1948 |
American Literature: From the beginning to 1860.-v. 2. From 1860 to the present John Towner Frederick Trumpų ištraukų rodinys - 1948 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
abolitionism American appeared beauty Boston called chief church civil colony Cotton Mather death Deism divine earth Edgar Allan Poe effect Emerson England English eyes fancy father fear feel gave give hand hath heard heart heaven holy honor horse human idea Indians John John Winthrop King labor land Lenape letter liberty Ligeia light literary literature live look Lord matter means ment mind Mondamin nature never Nevermore night peace person poem poet political principles Puritan Quakers reason religion Roger Williams sachem seemed slavery society Song of Hiawatha soul speak spirit sweet thee things thou thought tion Tom Walker took true truth unto voice Washington Irving whole wigwam wild William wind word writing York young