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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: January 4, 1861., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 9 total hits in 5 results.
New England (United States) (search for this): article 3
Vermont (Vermont, United States) (search for this): article 3
Samuel Ketteli (search for this): article 3
Goldsmith (search for this): article 3
King Jonathan the first.
A Yankee is emphatically a civil man, though his civility may not produce all the bows, and grimaces, and unmeaning compliments which accompany or constitute that quality among French; rudeness of manners could be charged against these people only by those who know nothing about them. "Countries," says Goldsmith, "wear very different appearances to persons in different circumstances.
A traveler who is whirled through Europe in a post-chaise, and a pilgrim who walks the grand tour on foot, will form very different conclusions." Now, sundry people have been whirled from Boston to New York in a mail coach, and said I know not what about manners.
I have traveled over the New England States on foot — over highways and byways; supped in the most splendid hotels and the most paltry inns; entered every farmer's door that offered as a resting place, and crossed any man's garden, or corn-field, or orchard, that lay in my way, without receiving an uncivil word on
French (search for this): article 3
King Jonathan the first.
A Yankee is emphatically a civil man, though his civility may not produce all the bows, and grimaces, and unmeaning compliments which accompany or constitute that quality among French; rudeness of manners could be charged against these people only by those who know nothing about them. "Countries," says Goldsmith, "wear very different appearances to persons in different circumstances.
A traveler who is whirled through Europe in a post-chaise, and a pilgrim who walks the grand tour on foot, will form very different conclusions." Now, sundry people have been whirled from Boston to New York in a mail coach, and said I know not what about manners.
I have traveled over the New England States on foot — over highways and byways; supped in the most splendid hotels and the most paltry inns; entered every farmer's door that offered as a resting place, and crossed any man's garden, or corn-field, or orchard, that lay in my way, without receiving an uncivil word on