Transylvania: Its Products and Its PeopleLongmans, Green, Reader, and Dyer, 1865 - 642 páginas |
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Términos y frases comunes
animal Austria bear better Bistritz broad brought Büdös built Burzenland called carbonic acid carried castle church clergyman colour corn Csik dwelling eimer English everywhere feeling feet fire florins Fogaras foot forest garian German gipsy give Government Háromszék Hermannstadt hills horses Hungarian Hungarian nobility Hungary Hunyad inhabitants joch Karlsburg King Klausenburg kreutzers Kronstadt land look maize Maros Mediasch Mehadia ment Moldavia mountains natural neat neighbour neighbourhood never noble obtained once party passed peasant peasantry plain political population present produce province river Alt road rock Rosenau Roumains round Schässburg seemed seen shot side slope soon sort spot stand steep stone stood strong Szamos Szekler taste thing tion told towers town Transylvania Turks Udvarhely valley Vienna vineyard Wallachian Wallack walls whole wild wine wood
Pasajes populares
Página 407 - Their hospitality was boundless. No stranger was ever sent away from their gates. The gentry received one another, and travelled to each other's houses, in a state almost feudal." " The establishments of the gentry were little villages, in which they and their vassals dwelt.
Página 480 - won ; here breathless lies the king. Hotspur. Where? Douglas. Here. Hotspur. This, Douglas ? No. I know this face full well: A gallant knight he was, his name
Página 407 - were rather needy potentates, living plentifully but in the roughest fashion, having numerous domestics, whose liveries were often ragged; keeping open. houses, and turning away no stranger from their gates; proud, idle, fond of all sorts of field sports, as became gentlemen of good lineage.
Página 578 - and sailers, are in a state of slavery or bondage, bound to the collieries or salt-works, where they work for life, transferable with the collieries and
Página 407 - The gentry of Virginia dwelt on their great lands after a fashion almost patriarchal. For its rough cultivation, each estate had a multitude of
Página 451 - Russel had been accustomed to such arrangements all her life long, and seemed never once to think of the matter; and—as she had reached that period of life at which women of the humbler class assume the
Página 578 - by the statute law of Scotland, as explained by the judges of the courts of law
Página 466 - One husband did not believe what his wife had said, and she immediately wanted to be separated, as " she could not live with a man who would not trust her." Another did not eat his dinner with appetite.
Página 358 - Austria is wrong to rely on their fidelity, for there is no one bond that unites them to her. Though under her rule, they all, to a man, look towards Russia, whose Sovereign is the head of their Church. They have nothing to do with the West; it is in the East their hopes lie; and
Página 390 - The number of murders committed during Lent is greater, I am told, than at any other time of the