КНИГИ НА АНГЛИЙСКИЙ ЯЗЫКЕ, ИМЕЮЩЕЕ ОТНОШЕНИЕ К СЛОВУ «EREMITISH»
Поиск случаев использования слова
eremitish в следующих библиографических источниках. Книги, относящиеся к слову
eremitish, и краткие выдержки из этих книг для получения представления о контексте использования этого слова в литературе на английский языке.
1
American Review : a Whig Journal of Politics, Literature, ...
He seemed not only to be a hermit, but hermit in general — the very substance or
notion of hermit, so very eremitish was his look. The poem opens very prettily — "
On a mound an Arab lay, And sung his sweet regrets — And told his amulets ...
2
Breathings of the devout soul, and Meditations and vows
So much as doing good is better than not doing evil, will I account Christian good
-fellowship better than an eremitish and melancholy solitariness. I would rather
confess my ignorance than falsely profess knowledge. It is no shame not to know
...
Joseph Hall (bp. of Norwich.), 1863
3
The Works of the Joseph Hall, 7
So much as doing good is better than not doing evil, will I account Christian good
fellowship better than an eremitish and melancholy solitariness. XCI. — I had
rather confess my ignorance than falsely profess knowledge. It is no shame not to
...
4
The Christian's monthly magazine and universal review
If Rome, in such points as these, boasts her superiority in feeding the imagination
, well may she boast ; for we have no emulation to diverge from God " the fountain
of living waters," unto the broken cisterns of Eremitish fiction. But we give ...
5
The Works: Now First Collected : with Some Account of His ...
So much, as doing good is better than not doing evil, will I account Christian good
- fellowship better than an eremitish and melancholy solitariness. XCI. I would
rather confess my ignorance, than falsely profess knowledge. It is no shame, not
to ...
Joseph Hall, Josiah Pratt, 1808
6
The American Review: A Whig Journal of Politics, Literature, ...
He seemed not only to be a hermit, but hermit in general — the very substance or
notion of hermit, so very eremitish was his look. The poem opens very prettily — "
On a mound an Arab lay, And sung his sweet regrets — And told his amulets ...
George Hooker Colton, James Davenport Whelpley, 1847
By the basin, under a small portico cut in the solid wall, sat a priest, old, bearded,
wrinkled, cowled—never beingmore perfectly eremitish.From the mannerof
thepeople present, hardly might one saywhich wasthe attraction, thefountain,
forever ...
8
Works: Miscellaneous works
Enter-know — To have mutual knowledge. En thirst — To cause to thirst.
Entitative — An abstraction of all circumstances from the thing considered.
Epiphonema — Exclamation . Eremite— A hermit. Eremitical, or Eremitish—
Retired. . Erratical ...
Joseph Hall, Josiah Pratt, 1808
9
Emerson and Thoreau: The Contemporary Reviews
... indefinite article, before hermit, in the second line. It intensifies and generalizes
the word. He seemed not only to be a hermit, but hermit in general—the very
substance or notion of hermit so very eremitish was his look. The poem opens
very ...
10
The works of ... Joseph Hall, with some account of his life ...
... To cause to thirst Entitative — An abstraction of all circum stances from the
thing considered. Epiphonema — Exclamation. Eremite — A hermit. Eremitical, or
Eremitish— Retired. Erratical — Wandering, irregular. Ereption — Snatching
away.
Joseph Hall (bp. of Norwich.), Josiah Pratt, 1808