The Story of RussiaRivingtons, 1885 - 268 sivua |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 23
Sivu 17
... brave . When they were lying in wait for an enemy , they would sometimes lie for hours under water in a stream , breathing through a long reed in their mouths that reached up to the air . meat , so their food was little trouble . They ...
... brave . When they were lying in wait for an enemy , they would sometimes lie for hours under water in a stream , breathing through a long reed in their mouths that reached up to the air . meat , so their food was little trouble . They ...
Sivu 29
... brave . So they sent a messenger to these princes , and the message was , " Our land is large and fruitful , but it lacks order and justice : come and govern us , and be our ruler . " Then , so goes the story , Rurik the king and his ...
... brave . So they sent a messenger to these princes , and the message was , " Our land is large and fruitful , but it lacks order and justice : come and govern us , and be our ruler . " Then , so goes the story , Rurik the king and his ...
Sivu 30
... brave . He determined that Ashold and Dir should not rule at Kief . But he feared their army was stronger than his , so he made up his mind to take them by craft . Then he dressed himself and his nephew Igor , Rurik's son , in the dress ...
... brave . He determined that Ashold and Dir should not rule at Kief . But he feared their army was stronger than his , so he made up his mind to take them by craft . Then he dressed himself and his nephew Igor , Rurik's son , in the dress ...
Sivu 38
... brave men he conquered the Bulgarians and took their cities . Then , like many other people , having gained a good thing , he thought he might keep it . So he stayed in Bulgaria . That the Greek Emperor did not like , for he feared that ...
... brave men he conquered the Bulgarians and took their cities . Then , like many other people , having gained a good thing , he thought he might keep it . So he stayed in Bulgaria . That the Greek Emperor did not like , for he feared that ...
Sivu 56
... Brave , King of Norway , and another was the wife of the King of France . One of his sons married the daughter of our King Harold . Besides this , he gave shelter to St. Olaf and his son , as you will read in the story of Norway . So ...
... Brave , King of Norway , and another was the wife of the King of France . One of his sons married the daughter of our King Harold . Besides this , he gave shelter to St. Olaf and his son , as you will read in the story of Norway . So ...
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
Alexander Alexis angry asked Askold and Dir back to Russia battle began Black Sea Boris's boyards brave built called Catharine Chouisky Church clever conquered Constantinople Cossacks Czar dead death died Dmitri dress Drevlians Elizabeth Emperor enemies envoy Europe false Dmitri fear Feodor fierce fight fought French friends grew hated heard heart horses houses Igor Ivan the Terrible Ivan's Kazan Khan Kief killed King of Sweden knew Kremlin land laws learned Little Russia lived Look Lord Novgorod loved marched merchants Michael Michael Romanov misery Moscow Napoleon nation Nicholas nobles Novgorod Oleg palace Patzinaks peace peasants Perun Peter Poles poor priests quarrelled reign round rule Rurik Russian army sent serfs Slavs soldiers Sophia stories Streltsi Sviatoslav Swedes Tartars taught things thought told took Touchino Rogue town tribes trouble Turkey Turks Vassili Vladimir walls wanted
Suositut otteet
Sivu 141 - to save the Muscovite Empire, we must spare neither our lands nor our goods ; let us sell our houses, and put our wives and children to service ; let us seek a man who will fight for the orthodox faith, and march under his banner." To give up all, and to arm themselves, such was the word that was handed round. Minine and others gave the third of their possessions ; one woman who had 12,000 roubles gave 10,000 of them. Those who hesitated to contribute had to do it by force. Minine...
Sivu 130 - ... copiously, learnedly, and inarticulately. " I've just been down, Robin lad, to the Palace of Holyrood with a hamper, — and I know all about it : — And the King is to walk on a white satin carpet, flowered with gold, all the way from the Palace to the Castle, — in a Tartan plaid and philibeg, with his crown on his head, and his sceptre in his hand : — The true Scotch crown, lad, that lies in the Castle, — all diamonds and rubies, as thick as slate-stones. — And then he is to drink...
Sivu 117 - ... or staffs tipped with iron ; nor humiliate her unduly by whipping her before his men, but, without anger or violence, to correct her moderately in private. No woman dared to object to this chastisement ; the most robust would allow herself calmly to be beaten by a feeble husband. The Russian proverb says, " I love thee like my soul, and I dust thee like my jacket.
Sivu 182 - Here my head, be it good or bad, must decide for itself," and ordered a retreat through the town. Yet he felt that Moscow was- not
Sivu 91 - ... Vassili the Blind, an old monk had a revelation about it in Novgorod the Great. He came and said to his archbishop : " Truly it is to-day that the Grand Prince triumphs ; God has given him an heir ; I behold this child making himself illustrious by glorious deeds. He will subdue princes and peoples. But woe to Novgorod ! Novgorod will fall at his feet, and never rise up again.
Sivu 180 - ... his hand, the Emperor of Russia could only oppose the 150,000 of Bagration and Barclay de Tolly. He counted on the devotion of the nation. " Oh that the enemy," says a proclamation of the Tzar, " may encounter in each noble a Pojarski, in each ecclesiastic a Palitsyne, in each citizen a Minine. Rise, all of you ! With the cross in your hearts and arms in your hands, no human force can prevail against you.
Sivu 167 - ... methods, and abolished the Russian national uniform, convenient, soldier-like, and well suited to the climate as it was. The Russians did not recognize themselves in their Prussian costume, with pigtails, powder, shoe-buckles, shoes, gaiters, heavy caps, and uncomfortable hats. Old Souvorof shook his head and said, " There are powders and powders ! Shoe-buckles are not gun-carriages, nor pigtails exactly bayonets ; we are not Prussians, but Russians.
Sivu 203 - may do what he will : I cannot change." He could not change, he could only disappear. He was a man of another age, an anachronism in the new Europe. When, from his villa at Peterhof, he could follow the manoeuvres of the enemy's fleet ; when he heard raised against him the voice of the hitherto silent nation, then this proud heart bled...
Sivu 150 - ... was interdicted at Paris. Among the ideas of which she boasted, we meet with the following, which were certainly calculated to enrage Louis XV. : — " The nation is not made for the sovereign, but the sovereign for the nation. Equality consists in the obedience of the citizens to the law alone, liberty is the right to do all that is not forbidden by law.
Sivu 174 - ... to protect the Sheep, yet there was no reason for utterly suppressing the Wolves. Well, the meeting took place in the thick wood. They pondered, considered, harangued, and at last framed a decree. Here you have it, word for word; "As soon as a Wolf shall have disturbed a flock, and shall have begun to worry a Sheep, then the Sheep shall be allowed, without respect to persons, to seize it by the scruff of the neck, to carry it into the nearest thicket or wood, and there to bring it before the...