Here and There in LondonW. Tweedie, 1859 - 228页 |
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共有 17 个结果,这是第 1-5 个
第9页
... believe- " That we can almost think we gaze Through golden vistas into heaven , " we see outlines of female forms ; and we wonder if the time will ever arrive when Lucretia Mott's dream shall be realised , and woman take her seat in the ...
... believe- " That we can almost think we gaze Through golden vistas into heaven , " we see outlines of female forms ; and we wonder if the time will ever arrive when Lucretia Mott's dream shall be realised , and woman take her seat in the ...
第19页
... believe to be an excellent man , and father of a family , but he certainly is a very poor speaker . Never was there a duller and drearier speech . Few men could sit it out . In the gallery there were a few strong - minded females who ...
... believe to be an excellent man , and father of a family , but he certainly is a very poor speaker . Never was there a duller and drearier speech . Few men could sit it out . In the gallery there were a few strong - minded females who ...
第46页
... believe the summary writer in the gallery remains all night , while the reporters take their turns , which last on an average half an hour . Thus , no sooner has a reporter been at his post for that time , than he leaves the house and ...
... believe the summary writer in the gallery remains all night , while the reporters take their turns , which last on an average half an hour . Thus , no sooner has a reporter been at his post for that time , than he leaves the house and ...
第77页
... believe the Mr. Russell , of the Times , was the London Correspondent of one of the Irish papers , and such papers as the Liverpool Albion , Cambridge Independent , and a few others I could name , evidently have for London ...
... believe the Mr. Russell , of the Times , was the London Correspondent of one of the Irish papers , and such papers as the Liverpool Albion , Cambridge Independent , and a few others I could name , evidently have for London ...
第78页
... believe a popular poet , it was there that the Ratcatcher's daughter lived ; and I should imagine , from the seedy , poverty - struck appearance of the place , that her papa's avocation was not so highly remunerative as some other ...
... believe a popular poet , it was there that the Ratcatcher's daughter lived ; and I should imagine , from the seedy , poverty - struck appearance of the place , that her papa's avocation was not so highly remunerative as some other ...
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audience benches better British cheap church coal-whippers Colonel Sibthorp commence crowd debate Derby door drink England Exeter Hall fear gallery gentlemen girls give Gough hear horses Hospital House of Commons House of Lords labour ladies living Lobby London Correspondent look Lord Derby lord high treasurer Lord John Lord John Russell Lord Palmerston Mark-lane metropolis morning neighbourhood never night omnibus orator Palmerston paper Parliament parliamentary reporters party pass Paternoster Row peers PENNY GAFF poor popular preacher preaching prostitution public-house publicans published pulpit Rag Fair railway readers Ritchie Ritchie's royal seated sell Sergeant-at-Arms shillings Shoreditch side Sir Robert Peel sits Smithers speak Speaker speech Stock Exchange Strangers street Sunday suppose tell thing tion town trade treasury Vauxhall women wonder write young
热门引用章节
第54页 - you will have every word that is spoken here by gentlemen misrepresented by fellows who thrust themselves into our gallery: you will have the speeches of the House every day printed, even during your session, and we shall be looked upon as the most contemptible assembly on the face of the earth...
第56页 - Potatoes make men healthy, vigorous, and active ; but what is still more in their favour, they make men tall; more especially was he led to say so as being rather under the common size, and he must lament that his guardians had not fostered him upon that genial vegetable.
第58页 - Give me but the liberty of the Press, and I will give to the Minister a Venal House of Peers. I will give him a corrupt and servile House of Commons, I will give him the full swing of the patronage of office.
第117页 - Near to the spot on which Snow Hill and Holborn Hill meet, there opens, upon the right hand as you come out of the city, a narrow and dismal alley leading to Saffron Hill.
第117页 - Hundreds of these handkerchiefs hang dangling from pegs outside the windows, or flaunting from the door-posts ; and the shelves within are piled with them. Confined as the limits of Field Lane are, it has its barber, its coffee-shop, its beer-shop, and its fried-fish warehouse. It is a commercial colony of itself : the emporium of petty larceny...
第28页 - Quarterday answered these, full of confidence in the nation and in himself. When the debate was getting heavy, Lord Snap jumped up to give them something light. The Lords do not encourage wit, and so are obliged to put up with pertness. But Viscount Memoir was very statesmanlike, and spouted a sort of universal history. Then there was Lord Ego, who vindicated his character, when nobody knew he had one, and explained his motives, because his auditors could not understand his acts.
第118页 - ... go as strangely as they come. Here the clothesman, the shoe-vamper, and the rag-merchant, display their goods as sign-boards to the petty thief; and stores of old iron and bones, and heaps of mildewy fragments of woollenstuff and linen , rust and rot in the grimy cellars.
第55页 - ... by an oration of almost unexampled excellence; uniting the most convincing closeness and accuracy of argument, with the most luminous precision and perspicuity of language; and alternately giving force and energy to truth, by solid and substantial reasoning ; and enlightening the most extensive and involved subjects with the purest clearness of logic, and the brightest splendour of rhetoric.
第58页 - ... will give him the whole host of ministerial influence— I will give him all the power that place can confer upon him to purchase up submission and overawe resistance ; and yet, armed with the liberty of the press, I -will go forth to meet him undismayed ; I will attack the mighty fabric he has reared with that mightier engine ; I will shake down from its height corruption, and bury it beneath the ruins of the abuses it was meant to shelter.
第55页 - House (which, from the expectation of the day, was uncommonly crowded) by an oration of almost unexampled excellence, uniting the most convincing closeness and accuracy of argument with the most luminous precision and perspicuity of language, and alternately giving...