Parley's present for boys and girls |
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Love all that is worthy of Love — your parents, your relatives, your playmates,
your friends ; aye, and even your enemies. Christmas is the Season of Love — it
celebrates Peace on earth and Good Will towards man ; and in this everlasting ...
Love all that is worthy of Love — your parents, your relatives, your playmates,
your friends ; aye, and even your enemies. Christmas is the Season of Love — it
celebrates Peace on earth and Good Will towards man ; and in this everlasting ...
第2页
particularly in those countries calling themselves Christian) be attended by the
exercise of the most generous feelings ; in the interchange of love between the
members of families, or between our friends and acquaintances; and in ...
particularly in those countries calling themselves Christian) be attended by the
exercise of the most generous feelings ; in the interchange of love between the
members of families, or between our friends and acquaintances; and in ...
第3页
The Book of the year is unwritten, — its pages are blank; they may be filled either
with a fair and beautiful moral caligraphy, or, like some of my young friends' "
copy-books," be " blurred and blotted" with errors and slovenly carelessness.
The Book of the year is unwritten, — its pages are blank; they may be filled either
with a fair and beautiful moral caligraphy, or, like some of my young friends' "
copy-books," be " blurred and blotted" with errors and slovenly carelessness.
第4页
Peter Parley (pseud.) Cjre $nkstrial %xts anb Paraifattam of feat Britain. N my last
Annual I informed my young friends res- p e cting many of our Industrial Arts. But I
left a few for the present Volume, and these few are among the most important.
Peter Parley (pseud.) Cjre $nkstrial %xts anb Paraifattam of feat Britain. N my last
Annual I informed my young friends res- p e cting many of our Industrial Arts. But I
left a few for the present Volume, and these few are among the most important.
第17页
^LAVERY, my young friends, is a cruel and wicked thing. There are, thank God,
no slaves in England. The moment a slave touches the ground of Old England he
is Free ! and no tyrant master, however strong he may be in physical force or ...
^LAVERY, my young friends, is a cruel and wicked thing. There are, thank God,
no slaves in England. The moment a slave touches the ground of Old England he
is Free ! and no tyrant master, however strong he may be in physical force or ...
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热门引用章节
第57页 - Yes, yes, father abbot, thy fault it is highe, And now for the same thou needest must dye; For except thou canst answer me questions three, Thy head shall be smitten from thy bodie. And first, quo...
第58页 - Away rode the abbot all sad at that word, And he rode to Cambridge, and Oxenford ; But never a doctor there was so wise, That could with his learning an answer devise.
第58页 - O, these are hard questions for my shallow witt, Nor I cannot answer your grace as yet : But if you will give me but three weeks' space, He do my endeavour to answer your grace. Now three weeks...
第59页 - With my crowne of golde so fair on my head, Among all my liege-men so noble of birthe, Tell me to one penny what I am worth.
第78页 - Not to spoil their hose. As soon as he rose, To make him strong and mighty, He drank by the tale, six pots of ale, And a quart of aqua-vitae.
第60页 - The king he laughed, and swore "by St. Jone, I did not think it could be gone so soone ! — Now from the third question thou must not shrinke, But tell me here truly what I do thinke.
第141页 - Eche foole, quoth Richard, full well may know that: Never are wee without two or three in the roof, Very well fleshed, and excellent fat: 100 But, prythee, say nothing wherever thou goe; We would not, for two pence, the king should it knowe.
第60页 - And tell the old abbot when thou comest home, Thou hast brought him a pardon from good King John.
第277页 - The poor fellow admiring how he came there, was served in state all day long : after supper he saw them dance, heard musicke, and all the rest of those courtlike pleasures ; but late at night, when he was well tipled, and again fast asleepe, they put on his old robes, and so conveyed him to the place where they first found him.
第59页 - The seconde, to tell him, without any doubt, How soone he may ride this whole world about ; And at the third question I must not shrinke, But tell him there truly what he does thinke.