Notes and abstracts, or heads of gallery lessons; adapted to simultaneous and class teaching |
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acorns Alps animals apostles Arctic Ocean Arphaxad bark Bay of Bengal beasts Beersheba Bible birds blackboard bound branches called camel carried Chamois Chevy Chase child Christ Church of England colour contains draw eagle ears earth East elephant ellipses EMBLEM Europe exports feet high forests Frith gallery gallery-lessons Geographical lessons God's command Gospel Grampians hair heads heaven Hereford hills Himaleh I.-STRUCTURE II.-LOCALITY III.-HABITS III.-HOW PROPAGATED inches island IV.-USES Jonah kind king labours lakes land Latitude LEDBURY length live Lord Lowlands manufactures mountains native Nineveh North objects Ocean patriarch Pennine range picture plain planted poor dog Tray prayer Pupil Teachers Quadruped questions and ellipses rivers scene Scotland Scripture sketch sometimes South square miles squirrels sugar Switzerland tail Tarshish teaching thou Thy neighbour tree trunk twelve or thirteen Tyne valleys Wansbeck waters wood word yards
热门引用章节
第26页 - THY neighbor ? — it is he whom thou Hast power to aid and bless ; Whose aching heart, or burning brow, Thy soothing hand may press. Thy...
第43页 - Her home is on the deep. With thunders from her native oak She quells the floods below — As they roar on the shore, When the stormy winds do blow; When the battle rages loud and long, And the stormy winds do blow.
第14页 - SAVIOUR, breathe an evening blessing Ere repose our spirits seal ; Sin and want we come confessing; Thou canst save and thou canst heal. 2 Though destruction walk around us, Though the arrows past us fly, Angel guards from thee surround us; We are safe, if thou art nigh.
第40页 - And his light scrip contain'da scanty store ; A fan of painted feathers in his hand, To guard his shaded face from scorching sand. The sultry sun had...
第44页 - All these are fair, but they may fling Their shade unsung by me ; My favourite, and the forest's king, The British Oak shall be! Its stem, though rough, is stout and sound, Its giant branches throw Their arms in shady blessings round O'er man and beast below, Its leaf, though late in spring it shares The zephyr's gentle sigh, As late and long in autumn wears A deeper, richer dye. Type of an honest English heart, It opes not at a breath, But having open'd, plays its part Until it sinks in death.
第26页 - Tis the fainting- poor, Whose eye with want is dim, Whom hunger sends from door to door — Go thou and succour him. Thy neighbour ? 'Tis that weary man, Whose years are at their brim, Bent low with sickness, cares, and pain — Go thou and comfort him.
第26页 - Yonder toiling slave, Fettered in thought and limb, Whose hopes are all beyond the grave — Go thou and ransom him.
第36页 - Flourish'd in air, low bending, plies around His busy nose, the steaming vapour snuffs Inquisitive, nor leaves one turf untried : Till, conscious of the recent stains, his heart Beats quick, his...
第14页 - ... mountain, the sending out of the birds, and other matters. The narrative has a closer resemblance to the account transmitted by the Greeks from Berosus, the Chaldean historian, than to the Biblical history, but it does not differ materially from either. The principal differences are as to the duration of the deluge, the name of the mountain on which the ark rested, the sending out of the birds, etc. The cuneiform account is much longer and fuller than that of Berosus, and has several details...