When a new-hatched savage running wild about his native woodlands in a grass clout, followed by the nibbling goats, as if he were a green sapling; even then, in Queequeg's ambitious soul, lurked a strong desire to see something more of
Christendom than a specimen whaler or two.
"There's not a magazine in
Christendom that would dare to publish it - you know that."
I may say, in short, that I took part in that glorious expedition, promoted by this time to be a captain of infantry, to which honourable charge my good luck rather than my merits raised me; and that day- so fortunate for
Christendom, because then all the nations of the earth were disabused of the error under which they lay in imagining the Turks to be invincible on sea-on that day, I say, on which the Ottoman pride and arrogance were broken, among all that were there made happy (for the Christians who died that day were happier than those who remained alive and victorious) I alone was miserable; for, instead of some naval crown that I might have expected had it been in Roman times, on the night that followed that famous day I found myself with fetters on my feet and manacles on my hands.
They resemble the steppes of Tartary more than any other known portion of
Christendom; being, in fact, a vast country, incapable of sustaining a dense population, in the absence of the two great necessaries already named.
He can almost be called a new prince, because he has risen, by fame and glory, from being an insignificant king to be the foremost king in
Christendom; and if you will consider his deeds you will find them all great and some of them extraordinary.
There is one, Francois Villet, at Cahors, who will send me wine-casks for my cloth-bales, so to Cahors I will go, though all the robber-knights of
Christendom were to line the roads like yonder poplars."
The genial festival of Christmas, which throughout all
Christendom lights up the fireside of home with mirth and jollity, followed hard upon the wedding just described.
What I saw their bravest and their fairest do last night, the lowest multitude that could be scraped up out of the purlieus of
Christendom would blush to do, I think.
In short, Harris Collins, in the totality of results, was guilty of causing more misery and pain to animals than all laboratories of vivisection in
Christendom.
Then the Cross, which for a thousand years and more had stood upon the ramparts of
Christendom, went down before the Crescent.
But a housemaid out of a reformatory, with a plain face and a deformed shoulder, falling in love, at first sight, with a gentleman who comes on a visit to her mistress's house, match me that, in the way of an absurdity, out of any story-book in
Christendom, if you can!
``I will not despoil him of his weapons,'' said the Knight of Ivanhoe, ``nor condemn his corpse to shame he hath fought for
Christendom God's arm, no human hand, hath this day struck him down.