| |
|
000.....................16
|
| then offered him from King Charles a present of 1,000 guineas as a testimony of his majesty's respect for | 1 Temper 76 |
| lives in this manner cannot have any use for 1,000 guineas." One more ground, let me add, on which this | 1 Temper 76 |
| he looks into his botanical manual, there are nearly 100,000 plants registered, each with virtues as precious as the cotton | 1 Spirit 113 |
| York; to Maine; to London; and an army of 60,000 volunteers, the sturdiest and keenest men that could be collected | 1 Spirit 115 |
| desireable of all society. In a great town of 130,000 souls, my friend, a man devoted to books and to | 1 MMNC1 142 |
| scheme for securing intellectual conversation in a city of 120,000 souls. Yes, conversation of wise men, was the masterpiece of | 1 MMNC1 144 |
| part of it is the King's Library, where 420,000 printed books and fifty or sixty thousand manuscripts are collected | 1 London 223 |
| we read, that Boston could buy Maine, and have 80,000,000 left. But the valuations of Boston are variable values | 1 Wealth 234 |
| read, that Boston could buy Maine, and have 80,000,000 left. But the valuations of Boston are variable values, or | 1 Wealth 234 |
| his Lowell mills at midsummer. The Lowell people gave 200,000 for one hundred square miles of water. Now, they put | 1 Angloam 282 |
| one brick house in it. It has now nearly 100,000 inhabitants, and is a wellbuilt city, with spacious squares, and | 1 Angloam 286 |
| of twenty thousand tons, a year ago you manufactured 800,000. Peace you want. But Mr. Cobden and Mr. Burritt, however | 1 Angloam 291 |
| cotton trade. And, what is cotton? One plant in 200,000 plants known to the botanist, vastly the largest part of | 2 Scholar 309 |
| than a hundred millions of men; Massachusetts, with 1,400,000 souls. I had, at my own door, or in my | 2 Resour 345 |
| holding just ten times the population of this city, 169,000 souls, and the town where good Bostonians are said to | 2 Table 370 |
| quantum memoriae." (Quintilian) Examples of memory. Seneca could say 2,000 words, when read. M. Angelo knew all good work in | 2 NHI70 58 |
| |
|
1.......................11
|
| Treasurer then offered him from King Charles a present of 1,000 guineas as a testimony of his majesty's respect | 1 Temper 76 |
| who lives in this manner cannot have any use for 1,000 guineas." One more ground, let me add, on which | 1 Temper 76 |
| commerce, the age of tools, the age of natural science. 1. Age of Commerce. I said in the outset that a | 1 Spirit 110 |
| from the mind into nature, assuming identity as the base. 1. Truths as thoughts become perceptions of the mind. 2. What | 1 MMNC1 148 |
| older traveller, the Relation of England by a Venetian in 1,500, three hundred and fifty years ago, I find a | 1 England 201 |
| to one man. The French Fourier said, therefore, "it took 1,728 persons to make a phalanstery," or one man. And | 1 France 309 |
| but cannot tell if she lived in 500 or in 1,500. It is reported of Burke and Sheridan, that Sheridan | 2 NMMP5 105 |
| of more than a hundred millions of men; Massachusetts, with 1,400,000 souls. I had, at my own door, or | 2 Resour 345 |
| he had laid out the studies for the next morning. 1. I honor health as the first muse; and sleep, as | 2 Resour 355 |
| retains the impression. Memory is valuable in proportion to its 1 tenacity or Bite, 2nd its availability its ability to pay | 2 NHI71 11 |
| little of history is required for poetry we may say 1 part history to 99 parts music. What makes the charm | 2 NHI71 38 |
| |
|
10......................1
|
| hearer. Change of scene and novelty are good tonics. March 10. Common Sense. Common sense looks directly at things their uses | 2 NHI71 24 |
| |
|
100.....................6
|
| when he looks into his botanical manual, there are nearly 100,000 plants registered, each with virtues as precious as the | 1 Spirit 113 |
| only one brick house in it. It has now nearly 100,000 inhabitants, and is a wellbuilt city, with spacious squares | 1 Angloam 286 |
| is with our thoughts. Herschel computed there were only about 100 hours in the year when his great 40 foot telescope | 2 NHI70 29 |
| men. As when Kepler said he could afford to wait 100 years for a reader, since God had waited 5000 years | 2 NHI70 37 |
| master this wild fluid thought? Kepler. "I can well wait 100 years for a reader since God Almighty has waited 5000 | 2 NHI70 62 |
| been able to accomplish so little in 500 years perhaps 100 lines of poetry have been written though the majority of | 2 NHI71 10 |
| |
|
1000....................1
|
| skip the means. Shakespeare, we would say, must have been 1000 years old when he first wrote. But he who has | 2 NHI70 64 |
| |
|
1119....................1
|
| hundred and seventyfive hundred, and the quotient, 26,445,256 1119, were correctly given. Her teacher begged to be allowed to | 2 NMMP5 108 |
| |
|
1120....................1
|
| risk of its being familiar to your ears? A.D. 1120: "King Eystein," said brother Sigurd, "all people are well pleased | 2 Table 374 |
| |
|
12......................2
|
| if it be not lucrative. A useful talent is wanted 12 hours in the day. Bohemianism is the surrender of Talent | 2 NHI70 30 |
| appearances assured Mr. O., if he would accompany him at 12 o'clock midnight to the neighboring churchyard, he would show | 2 NHI70 40 |
| |
|
120.....................1
|
| the scheme for securing intellectual conversation in a city of 120,000 souls. Yes, conversation of wise men, was the masterpiece | 1 MMNC1 144 |
| |
|
130.....................1
|
| most desireable of all society. In a great town of 130,000 souls, my friend, a man devoted to books and | 1 MMNC1 142 |
| |
|
14......................1
|
| about matters which were not at all his concern. March 14. The Comic Element in the Mind I have pursued a | 2 NHI71 30 |
| |
|
1433....................1
|
| France warrants a better future. At the Diet of Tours, 1433, the clergy and nobility insisted that the Third Estate should | 1 France 330 |
| |
|
14TH....................1
|
| heavens, and the chief constellations. Thus, do not forget the 14th November, when the meteors come, and, on some years, drop | 2 Country1 38 |
| |
|
15......................6
|
| But at the age of ten with a multiplicand of 15 figures and a multiplier of 15 figures, to give the | 2 NHI70 32 |
| with a multiplicand of 15 figures and a multiplier of 15 figures, to give the result at once was indeed a | 2 NHI70 32 |
| Grotius repeated all a rollcall backwards. etc., etc. Safford, multiplicand 15 figures, by 15 figures in 60 seconds. Memory perfectly arranged | 2 NHI70 58 |
| a rollcall backwards. etc., etc. Safford, multiplicand 15 figures, by 15 figures in 60 seconds. Memory perfectly arranged, and contrived and | 2 NHI70 58 |
| goes through the same process more quickly. Safford who multiplies 15 figures by 15 figures in 60 seconds does it by | 2 NHI71 12 |
| same process more quickly. Safford who multiplies 15 figures by 15 figures in 60 seconds does it by the span of | 2 NHI71 12 |
| |
|
1500....................1
|
| again and calls everybody to hear these sages who wrote 1500 years ago. Thomas Taylor was a man of singular character | 2 NHI70 46 |
| |
|
1600....................2
|
| Pilgrims landed in America. It is certain, that, until about 1600, very different manners and customs existed in France. France was | 1 France 323 |
| none for the convenience or luxury of such assemblies. In 1600, Catherine de Vivonne married Charles d'Angennes, Marquis de Rambouillet | 1 France 323 |
| |
|
1607....................1
|
| read, and poems of some selected friends." John Rainolds (died 1607), Anthony ... Wood tells us, "was a third University. He alone | 2 NMMP5 110 |
| |
|
1616....................1
|
| made to support the two other estates. As late as 1616, the Third Estate were forced to address the king on | 1 France 330 |
| |
|
1620....................2
|
| the history of New England. The colony was planted in 1620; in 1638 Harvard College was founded. The General Court of | 1 NE1 15 |
| the history of New England. The Colony was planted in 1620: In 1638, Harvard College was founded. The General Court of | 1 NE3 42 |
| |
|
1629....................1
|
| address the king on their knees, the others standing. In 1629, the grand judge of the monks of Saint Claude convicted | 1 France 330 |
| |
|
1635....................1
|
| Richelieu, ambitious oftheir influence, founded the French Academy, in 1635, which was the establishment of a kind of literary nobility | 1 France 325 |
| |
|
1638....................2
|
| of New England. The colony was planted in 1620; in 1638 Harvard College was founded. The General Court of Massachusetts in | 1 NE1 15 |
| of New England. The Colony was planted in 1620: In 1638, Harvard College was founded. The General Court of Massachusetts in | 1 NE3 42 |
| |
|
1647....................2
|
| Harvard College was founded. The General Court of Massachusetts in 1647, "To the end that learning may not be buried in | 1 NE1 15 |
| Harvard College was founded. The General Court of Massachusetts in 1647, "To the end that learning may not perish in the | 1 NE3 42 |
| |
|
1648....................1
|
| Quakers, speaking of the state of England in the year 1648, writes, "About this time, there were abundance of people in | 1 NE1 10 |
| |
|
1688....................1
|
| in no small degree to bring about the Revolution in 1688. But Bishop Burnet did not foresee the vaster power of | 2 LL4 231 |
| |
|
169.....................1
|
| now holding just ten times the population of this city, 169,000 souls, and the town where good Bostonians are said | 2 Table 370 |
| |
|
1753....................1
|
| can give a really good recipe for it. Fullwood in 1753 advises shaving the head and applying a lotion of many | 2 NHI71 18 |
| |
|
1758....................1
|
| hundred years ago. Thomas Taylor was born in London in 1758. He learned the rudiments of Latin and Greek at St | 2 LL4 234 |
| |
|
1770....................1
|
| such as the Boston Port Bill and Stamp Act, in 1770, and the Fugitive Slave Bill and Nebraska Bill. These startle | 2 1855 12 |
| |
|
1775....................2
|
| we are forced to go back to the Revolution in 1775, to find any ground of praise. In the Greek Revolution | 2 Fortune 325 |
| to the society of nations from the American Revolution of 1775, no less benefit accrued from the present calamities. Now, in | 2 Fortune 330 |
| |
|
1776....................2
|
| it were new, would receive his sanction. In Massachusetts, in 1776, he would, beyond all question, have been a refugee. He | 1 1851 271 |
| The 1st Olympiad 776 B.C. we can remember by 1776. Sir John Herschel laughs at the absurd figures of the | 2 NHI71 18 |
| |
|
1786....................1
|
| in a week or two." Thus of the clubs in 1786. France is the empire of bagatelle, and one must leave | 1 France 319 |
| |
|
1787....................2
|
| and cast it out by spasms. The fathers, in July 1787, consented to adopt population as the basis of representation, and | 2 1855 8 |
| of the bribe, namely, the magnificent prosperity of America from 1787, is their excuse for the crime. It was a fatal | 2 1855 8 |
| |
|
1789....................3
|
| legal redress. M. Servan, a lawyer, who drew up (about 1789) an analysis of the criminal code, ends his labors with | 1 France 330 |
| with the people of the court, persons of fashion. In 1789, nobody yet entered the Tuileries without a sword at his | 1 France 331 |
| sure, looks like the fools' paradise which Paris wore in 1789, without the apology which Paris had in the abominable despotism | 2 LL2 213 |
| |
|
17TH....................2
|
| unknown there, but belonging to a numerous powerful family. Feb. 17th It is only in our country that the unity of | 2 NHI71 3 |
| said the physician. I am Cantalini said the patient. March 17th On Genius the Distinction between Genius Talent. March 21st I | 2 NHI71 34 |
| |
|
18......................1
|
| disobey. You know that the Act of Congress of September 18, 1850, is a law which every one of you will | 1 1851 266 |
| |
|
1806....................1
|
| later, and you are unnecessary. "If I had attempted in 1806, what I performed in 1807," said Napoleon, "I had been | 2 Fortune 335 |
| |
|
1807....................4
|
| fights against statute. By the law of Congress March 2, 1807, it is piracy and murder punishable with death, to enslave | 1 1851 267 |
| Their finespun webs." Buonaparte writes to his brother, in March, 1807, "Neither the staff, nor the colonels, nor the other regimental | 2 Classes 172 |
| to be done till 1810, can't be done in 1807. The Gallic temperament can't submit to wait upon time | 2 Morfor 279 |
| If I had attempted in 1806, what I performed in 1807," said Napoleon, "I had been lost." Fremont was superseded in | 2 Fortune 335 |