Of this type was the peasant Kryloff, a popular agitator who inflamed the whole of South Russia at the beginning of the nineteenth century.
The Hindus paid no heed; but ten thousand faithful Mohammedans, inflamed with fanatic ardour, their religious feelings wrought upon by shrieking fakirs and mullahs, congregated at the gates waiting the arrival of their king.
Even though Minghal inflamed their racial and religious prejudices against Ahmed as one of the hated Feringhis, they saw little to gain by capturing or killing him.
The scientific spirit turns from the legends and the superstitions that in the past have sundered men, have inflamed the religious wars, have filled the realm of imagination with good and evil spirits.
Inflamed to madness by the coquetry of the girl-widow, who neither granted nor quite withheld her favors, the three rivals began to interchange threatening glances.
Her keen black eyes and features expressed an imagination inflamed by the pride of gratified revenge, and the triumph of victory.
One of the rabbits speedily became inflamed about the ears, and the ears were paralysed in both rabbits.
Absence of respiratory murmur in places where the lung is congested; feebleness of that sound in the inflamed parts, with humid crepitating wheezing.
These membranes are often inflamed to such a degree as to occasion extravasation of blood, which I have observed coagulated on their surface.
When 'coryza' in the dog runs on to catarrh, and the membrane of the pharynx partakes of the inflammation, the velum palati becomes inflamed and thickened, but will not act as a perfect communication between the mouth and the nose.
The eye is much inflamed and the brow considerably protruded.
The dead grating sound confined to the inflamed parts.
The eyes of a favourite spaniel were found inflamed and impatient of light.
Mr. Burke, too, who had changed his political principles, and who was inflamed with the burning zeal which distinguishes all converts, was provoked at Dr.
Her eyes were red and inflamed with weeping, and her looks betrayed great internal suffering.
A young and richly-dressed young man issued from a tavern in Broad-street, and with a wild and inflamed countenance, staggered along.
Some it inflamed to an ungovernable pitch of madness, others it reduced to the depths of despair, while in many cases it brought out and aggravated the worst parts of the character.
The expedients on which we fell to assuage our thirst rather inflamed it, and several things added to our distress.
Whenever men and women met together, the men would be in a state of inflamed competition towards one another, and the women likewise, and the intercourse of ideas would be in suspense.
No generalisations about race are too extravagant for the inflamed credulity of the present time.
His face was pale and the cheek-bones seemed ready to pierce the reddened skin; his eyes had a glassy look under the inflamed lids.
Pitifully small, with a pallid, unhealthy skin and inflamed eyes, the mother gazed at it with mingled anxiety and grief.
Its immediate, conversion into water when inflamed in the atmosphere, might also account for its not appearing in a separate form.
This act of treachery, so far from intimidating the people, inflamed their rage and rendered them desperate.
He was a man of no mean mental acquirements, but passionate and often inflamed by inebriety.
He will be inflamed against you, if he hears you have, in ever so small a matter, placed yourself under any obligation to Mr. Ware.
Gloom and distraction soon returned--the same rebellious violence inflamed by the fresh alarm of mamma's returning illness.
The vermiform appendix, being attached to this inflamed colon, becomes inflamed also.
The dusky form crouching in the corner moved not, spoke not; but the inflamed eyes glared in the darkness like two red-hot coals.
She turned her red, inflamed eyeballs on him in voiceless inquiry.
They paused now, drew a long breath, and wiped the perspiration off their heated and inflamed faces.
I have conquered the conqueress, caged the eaglet, tamed the wild queen of the kelpies, won the most beautiful, enchanting, intoxicating fairy that ever inflamed the heart or set on fire the brain of man.
Speaking Russian, Polish and German equally well and inflamed by what she considered a holy mission, she was a source of danger to any government whose hospitality she was enjoying.
The whisky inflamed his mind and he strode up and down Main Street, ready to quarrel with any one his eye lighted upon.
His imagination wasinflamed and he tried to picture himself in the position of the young city man.
His poverty was relieved by oppression; and the public discontent was inflamed by equal abuses in the collection, and the application, of the revenue.
In the first moments of rebellion, when Arnold of Brescia had inflamed their minds against the church, the Romans artfully labored to conciliate the favor of the empire, and to recommend their merit and services in the cause of Cæsar.
But the long hostility of the mitre and the crown increased the numbers, and inflamed the passions, of their enemies.
But these profane causes of national enmity were fortified and inflamed by the venom of religious zeal.
In war he was brave, active, and fortunate; his courage was softened by clemency; but it was likewiseinflamed by presumption, and corrupted by intemperance and idleness.
The ambition of the sultan was inflamed by the obligation of deserving this august title; and he turned his arms against the kingdom of Hungary, the perpetual theatre of the Turkish victories and defeats.
His plaintive embassy obtained much pity and some relief; and the conduct of the succor was intrusted to the marshal Boucicault, [68] whose religious chivalry was inflamed by the desire of revenging his captivity on the infidels.
Several very prudent and very well-intentioned persons were of opinion, that, during the prevalence of such dispositions, all struggle rather inflamed than lessened the distemper of the public counsels.