Memoirs of an American Lady: With Sketches of Manners and Scenes in America as They Existed Previous to the Revolution, Volumen1Dodd, Mead, 1901 - 269 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 62
Página xv
... kind- ness of the sergeant , who taught her to decipher words and to understand the meaning of the ancient minstrel . From this source she in part derived that enthusiastic love of her native land , " Where blooms the red heather and ...
... kind- ness of the sergeant , who taught her to decipher words and to understand the meaning of the ancient minstrel . From this source she in part derived that enthusiastic love of her native land , " Where blooms the red heather and ...
Página xviii
... kind labors of a stranger with true Highland enthusiasm , and felt that she was their own countrywoman in heart and soul as well as in tongue and lineage . Mrs. Grant studied their " folklore , " and was successful in relieving much ...
... kind labors of a stranger with true Highland enthusiasm , and felt that she was their own countrywoman in heart and soul as well as in tongue and lineage . Mrs. Grant studied their " folklore , " and was successful in relieving much ...
Página xxiii
... kind act was consummated chiefly through the efforts of Miss Lowell , whose brother John Lowell , Jr. , became acquainted with Mrs. Grant during his residence of several years in Edinburgh , and left her a legacy of five thousand ...
... kind act was consummated chiefly through the efforts of Miss Lowell , whose brother John Lowell , Jr. , became acquainted with Mrs. Grant during his residence of several years in Edinburgh , and left her a legacy of five thousand ...
Página xxx
... The wheels of weary life at last stood still . " In a letter announcing Mrs. Grant's death to my father , her son says : " My mother was entirely exempted from pain or suffering of any kind , bodily XXX MEMOIR OF MRS . GRANT.
... The wheels of weary life at last stood still . " In a letter announcing Mrs. Grant's death to my father , her son says : " My mother was entirely exempted from pain or suffering of any kind , bodily XXX MEMOIR OF MRS . GRANT.
Página xxxi
... kind , bodily or mental , and she at last appeared to expire in a gentle slumber , leaving her features in the sweetest composure and confirming the assurance she gave us almost to the last that she suffered no pain . Her calmness and ...
... kind , bodily or mental , and she at last appeared to expire in a gentle slumber , leaving her features in the sweetest composure and confirming the assurance she gave us almost to the last that she suffered no pain . Her calmness and ...
Contenido
165 | |
174 | |
180 | |
186 | |
195 | |
207 | |
222 | |
229 | |
80 | |
88 | |
96 | |
119 | |
126 | |
135 | |
146 | |
155 | |
161 | |
235 | |
243 | |
264 | |
271 | |
279 | |
285 | |
297 | |
300 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Albanians Albany American Lady amusements appear attached Aunt beauty became began brother called Chapter character cheerful COHOES FALLS Colonel Schuyler considered Cuyler daughter delight distinguished domestic domine Dutch duties early elegance father Five Nations Flats formed formerly Fort Augustus French Frielinghuysen friends Grant habits happiness Highland Indian inhabitants instance kind King Hendrick knew labor Laggan lakes language lived LOCH LAGGAN luxury manners marriage married means Memoirs ment military mind mode Mohawk Mohawk nation Mohawk river moral mother native nature never numbers occupied Onnonthio party patroon peace person Peter Schuyler Philip Schuyler polished possessed province received recollect regiment religion Rensselaer Rensselaerwyck respect river sachems scarce SCHUYLER HOUSE seemed settlers simplicity singular Sir Walter Scott society soon spirit stadtholder strangers style summer superior tion town traders trees tribes warriors West Friesland wild winter woods York young
Pasajes populares
Página 230 - I do not sleep, I have my eyes open, and the sun, which enlightens me, discovers to me a great captain at the head of a company of soldiers, who speaks as if he were dreaming.
Página 231 - Hear, Yonnondio, our women had taken their clubs, our children and old men had carried their bows and arrows into the heart of your camp, if our warriors had not disarmed them, and kept them back, when your messenger, Ohguesse, came to our castles.
Página 232 - Grangida, who loves you, and desires you to accept of this present of beaver, and take part with me in my feast, to which I invite you. This present of beaver is sent to Yonnondio, on the part of the Five Nations.
Página 231 - Hear, Yonnondio; take care for the future, that so great a number of soldiers as appear there do not choke the tree of peace planted in so small a fort. It will be a great loss, if, after it had so easily taken root, you should stop its growth, and prevent its covering your country and ours with its branches.
Página xxxv - Her literary works, although composed amidst misfortune and privation, are written at once with simplicity and force ; and uniformly bear the stamp of a virtuous and courageous mind, recommending to the reader that patience and fortitude which the writer herself practised in such an eminent degree.
Página 230 - I thank you, in their name, for bringing back into their country the calumet, which your predecessor received from their hands. It was happy for...
Página 72 - ... town and country, a respectable mistress of a family going out to her garden, in an April morning, with her great calash, her little painted basket of seeds, and her rake over her shoulder, to her garden labours.
Página 77 - ... pasture. At the other end of the town was a fertile plain along the river, three miles in length, and near a mile broad. This was all divided into lots, where every inhabitant raised Indian corn, sufficient for the food of two or three slaves, (the greatest number that each family ever possessed,) and for his horses, pigs, and poultry: their flour and other grain they purchased from farmers in the vicinity.
Página xxv - What the loss of the Huguenots was to commerce and manufactures in France, that of the loyalists was to religion, literature, and amenity, in America. The silken threads were drawn out of the mixed web of society, which has ever since been comparatively coarse and homely.
Página 231 - We may go where we please, and carry with us whom we please, and buy and sell what we please : if your allies be your slaves, use them as such, command them to receive no other but your people.