London Society, Том 3; Том 5James Hogg, Florence Marryat William Clowes and Sons, 1864 |
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Страница 4
... honour to his remains . When he is alive , do we not set our house in order to receive him ; do we not place the ... honoured so much in the warmth of life - has grown cold ? Away with your hard shopkeeping maxims ! Leave me to pillow ...
... honour to his remains . When he is alive , do we not set our house in order to receive him ; do we not place the ... honoured so much in the warmth of life - has grown cold ? Away with your hard shopkeeping maxims ! Leave me to pillow ...
Страница 18
... honour on the festive board . At that board the colonist , mindful of the custom of fatherland , unites his family , and after service in the neighbouring church , entertains his friends with grace and no stinted hospitality . And if ...
... honour on the festive board . At that board the colonist , mindful of the custom of fatherland , unites his family , and after service in the neighbouring church , entertains his friends with grace and no stinted hospitality . And if ...
Страница 22
... honour of being colonial - born , it is not quite so easy to realize the presence of Christmas . The old gentleman comes amongst us here in a garb so very different from that in which you and I used to hail him in the olden time , that ...
... honour of being colonial - born , it is not quite so easy to realize the presence of Christmas . The old gentleman comes amongst us here in a garb so very different from that in which you and I used to hail him in the olden time , that ...
Страница 38
... honour may not be sullied , rises . to a height of character which shows us the noblest aim of tragedy , the glorification of personal liberty of decision in the midst of the most heart - rending conflicts , to which we may be doomed by ...
... honour may not be sullied , rises . to a height of character which shows us the noblest aim of tragedy , the glorification of personal liberty of decision in the midst of the most heart - rending conflicts , to which we may be doomed by ...
Страница 38
... honoured institution , of course ; but in these days one likes to know more about things than that they exist - one likes derivations . What are ladies ' carriages derived from , and what is their supposed object ? " My dear Miss ...
... honoured institution , of course ; but in these days one likes to know more about things than that they exist - one likes derivations . What are ladies ' carriages derived from , and what is their supposed object ? " My dear Miss ...
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Aaron Hill Acrostics admired Arthur Peel asked Aunt ball Bath buns beauty called Carew charming Chichester Christmas church colour Countisbury course cousin cried David dear door dress Elsie England Engleheart English Esther Eton eyes face feel feet friends gentleman girl give Grampus half hand Handel handsome happy head heard heart Heidegger Honiton honour hour Jane John Hartman kick king Lady Felicia laugh letter lived London look Lord married mas Day ment merchants Milly mind Miss Fleming Miss Joan morning never night Oliver once opera passed play players poor pretty Probus racter railway round seemed Senesino side smile stranger sure talk tell thing thought tion told took town Tudor turned valentine Valentine's Day voice walk William Tillyer window woman words young ladies
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Страница 330 - Nay, by cock!" some began cry; Some sung of " Jenkin and Julian" for their meed; But, for lack of money, I might not speed. Then into Cornhill anon I yode Where...
Страница 532 - Whereupon the captain, weighing their unconscionable request, wrote to them a letter, that they dealt too rigorously with him, to go about to cut his throat in the price of his commodities, which were so reasonably rated as they could not by a great deal have the like at any other man's hands. But seeing they had sent him this to his supper, he would in the morning bring them as good a breakfast.
Страница 356 - These are two Irish girls, of no fortune, who are declared the handsomest women alive. I think their being two so handsome and both such perfect figures is their chief excellence, for singly I have seen much handsomer women than either ; however, they can't walk in the park, or go to Vauxhall, but such mobs follow them that they are generally driven away.
Страница 359 - Her dress was a black silk sack, made for a large hoop, which she wore without any, and it trailed a yard on the ground...
Страница 533 - If all the miseries and troublesome affairs of this sorrowful voyage should be perfectly and thoroughly written, there should need a painful man with his pen, and as great a time as he had that wrote the lives and deaths of the...
Страница 357 - ... each ; he soon lost a thousand. I own I was so little a professor in love that I thought all this parade looked ill for the poor girl, and could not conceive, if he was so much engaged with his mistress as to disregard such sums, why he played at all.
Страница 361 - twould a saint provoke" (Were the last words that poor Narcissa spoke), " No, let a charming chintz, and Brussels lace Wrap my cold limbs, and shade my lifeless face : One would not, sure, be frightful when one's dead — And, Betty, give this cheek a little red.
Страница 356 - The Gunnings flew into a passion, and asked her what she meant; that they came to see the palace, not to be showed as a sight themselves.
Страница 179 - Valentine that is fallen to him, than to the Valentine to whom he is fallen. Fortune having thus divided the company into so many couples, the Valentines give balls and treats to their mistresses, wear their billets several days upon their bosoms or sleeves, and this little sport often ends in Love.
Страница 534 - Chanceler held on his course towards that unknown part of the world, and sailed so farre, that he came at last to the place where he found no night at all, but a continuall light and brightnesse of the sunne shining clearly upon the huge and mightie sea.