The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Volume 12, No. 327, August 16, 1828 by Various
page 33 of 54 (61%)
page 33 of 54 (61%)
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cafes of the Palais Royal, than with the streets of our own metropolis.
We have seen many who could name each single quay along the borders of the Seine; but who were totally ignorant of those great works of art, the bridges, docks, and warehouses of their native Thames, otherwise than as they were hurried past them in the Calais steam-boat. _Quarterly Review_. * * * * * We have been somewhat amused with the oddity of a few similes in the article in Phillips's _State Trials_, in the last No. of the _Edinburgh Review_. Thus an ordinary reader would lose his way in _Howell's State Trials_, at the second page, "from the number of volumes, smallness of print, &c." "A Londoner might as well take a morning walk through an Illinois prairie, or dash into a back-settlement forest, without a woodman's aid." Mr. Phillips has "enclosed but a corner of the waste, swept little more than a single stall in the Augean stable;" "holding a candle to the back-ground of history," &c. * * * * * LORD COLLINGWOOD Went to sea when eleven years old. He used, himself, to tell as an instance of his simplicity at this time, "that as he was sitting crying for his separation from home, the first lieutenant observed him; and pitying the tender years of the poor child, spoke to him in terms of |
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