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Updated: June 3, 2025


Are you going up the ... no, I asked you that. What ship ... no, I asked you that, too. What hotel are you ... no, you told me that. Let me see ... um .... Oh, what kind of voy ... no, we've been over that ground, too. Um ... um ... well, I believe that is all. BONJOUR I am very glad to have made your acquaintance, ladies.

He died as he had lived, universally beloved and respected by all who knew him; for, with the advantages of birth and fortune, he was humble and beneficent and employed his great riches, and the interest he possessed in the state, only to do good. Harris, I, 593. Forst. Voy. and Disc. p. 117. Modern Geogr. II. xvi. Ital Libr. p. iv. Mod. Geogr. II. xvi.

Anglo-Saxon Version of Orosius, by Alfred the Great, translated by Daines Barrington, p. 9. Langebeck, Script. Dan. Forster, Voy. and Disc. in the North, p. 53.

Glad acclamations attended the progress of the royal cortége. The people shouted with joy, and all, high and low, sang a song composed for the occasion by Lope de Vega, the famous dramatist, which told how Charles had come, under the guidance of love, to the Spanish sky to see his star Maria. "Carlos Estuardo soy Que, siendo amor mi guia, Al cielo d'España voy Por ver mi estrella Maria."

Forster conjectures that the original words of Rubruquis are here corrupted, and that this passage ought to have been "beyond Tangut," instead of beyond Tebet or Thibet; in which case, the countries of Langa and Solanga, may refer to that of the Lamuts and Solonians, the ancestors of the Mantschus or Mundschurians. Voy. and Disc. 108.

It was as though, as soon as the Parker-Browne party reached the foot of the mountain, the ladder by which they had ascended and descended was broken up. The earthquake cleavage is plainly shown half-way down the ridge in the background. The Browne Tower is the uppermost point in the picture. What a wonderful providential escape these three men, Parker, Browne, and La Voy had!

This short commentary upon three words in that part of the travels of Benjamin, which has been omitted in Harris, is extracted from Forster, Hist of Voy. and Disc. in the North, p. 92, and shews the extreme difficulty of any attempt to give an accurate edition of the whole work, if that should be thought of, as it would require critical skill not only in Hebrew, but in the languages of the different countries to which the travels refer.

DON PEDRO. ¿Qué entiendes de eso? ... dila que venga. DON PEDRO. Pues, y como le iba a usted diciendo, Sr. D. Eduardo, yo soy demasiado buen padre para pretender ... luego, ya voy a viejo, estoy viudo, no tengo más que esta hija ... a la que quiero como a las niñas de mis ojos ... no soy además amigo de lloros ni tristezas dentro de casa, y en suma....

If if something has happened to him it only means your life, too!" "Voy!" said the Indian, "I go!" He turned and looked again at Honor, this time with a warming pity in his bronze face. "I will bring back your man, Señorita," he said in Spanish. "And this great strong one" he pierced Carter through with his black gaze "shall guard you till I come again."

Forst. Forster, Voy. and Disc. 79. Vit. S. Anscharii, ap. Langeb. Script. Dan. Ad. Brem. Hist. Eccles. Lib. I. cap. 17. Early Discovery of Winland by the Icelanders, about A.D. 1001. The passion which the Nordmen or Normans had always manifested for maritime expeditions, still prevailed among them in the cold and inhospitable regions of Iceland and Greenland.

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