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Browsing named entities in Charles Congdon, Tribune Essays: Leading Articles Contributing to the New York Tribune from 1857 to 1863. (ed. Horace Greeley).
Found 2,913 total hits in 1,147 results.
Newton (search for this): chapter 6
Leslie (search for this): chapter 6
Mr. Mason's manners.
what are good manners?
What is politeness as distinguished from rusticity?
Miss Leslie has written a little elementary book intended to teach our Yankee girls how to behave themselves everywhere — in the church, in the drawing-room, in the railwaycar, and at the table d'hote. Mons. de Meilhauval has also compiled a Manuel du Scavoir, which is said to be a great polisher, but we have never seen it, and therefore, for all the good Monsieur might have done for us, we remain in our original ursine condition.
But if we have books for brides and bridegrooms, with treatises upon every manner of incoming and outgoing, incident to human life; if we have complete letter-writers and vade-mecums for all kinds of persons, why should not our ministers plenipotentiary and our embassadors extraordinary have a manual of as much authority as that of General Scott is with infantry?
Why should they not be taught to go through their paces, their genuflexions, their advance
James Buchanan (search for this): chapter 6
Lewis Cass (search for this): chapter 6
Gaul (search for this): chapter 6
John Randolph (search for this): chapter 6
Marcy (search for this): chapter 6
Bacchus (search for this): chapter 6
John Y. Mason (search for this): chapter 6
Mr. Mason's manners.
what are good manners?
What is politeness as distinguished from rusticity?
Miss Leslie has written a little elementary book intended to teach our Yankee girls how to behave themselves everywhere — in the church, in the d been betrayed into these suggestions by seeing mentioned in the newspapers a painful error, into which the Honorable John Y. Mason, the august representative of this country near the Court of Louis Bonaparte, recently fell.
We wish to speak with tenderness of Mr. Mason, because, notwithstanding his innocence of the vernacular of Gaul, he has shown a great desire to acquit himself creditably, by arraying himself upon court-days in the small-clothes and cocked-hat proscribed by the late Mr. Ma n when an ill-conditioned cur overthrew a candle, and burned all the crooked mathematical computations of years.
Oh, John Y. Mason!
say we, thou little knowest what mischief thou wert in danger of doing!
The venerable Benton once said of Embassad
Meilhauval (search for this): chapter 6
Mr. Mason's manners.
what are good manners?
What is politeness as distinguished from rusticity?
Miss Leslie has written a little elementary book intended to teach our Yankee girls how to behave themselves everywhere — in the church, in the drawing-room, in the railwaycar, and at the table d'hote. Mons. de Meilhauval has also compiled a Manuel du Scavoir, which is said to be a great polisher, but we have never seen it, and therefore, for all the good Monsieur might have done for us, we remain in our original ursine condition.
But if we have books for brides and bridegrooms, with treatises upon every manner of incoming and outgoing, incident to human life; if we have complete letter-writers and vade-mecums for all kinds of persons, why should not our ministers plenipotentiary and our embassadors extraordinary have a manual of as much authority as that of General Scott is with infantry?
Why should they not be taught to go through their paces, their genuflexions, their advance