Laura Everingham; Or, The Highlanders of Glen OraRoutledge, Warne, and Routledge, 1864 - 404 страници |
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Страница 27
... wind , and it will hear her , as it has often heard our women weep , when the roofs were torn down and the fires extinguished ; when the cabers were tossed upon the heath , and the cottagers were driven in fetters to the shore , like ...
... wind , and it will hear her , as it has often heard our women weep , when the roofs were torn down and the fires extinguished ; when the cabers were tossed upon the heath , and the cottagers were driven in fetters to the shore , like ...
Страница 28
James Grant. gree an ell long ; but wind your horn , and then let us shout . ' Callum blew his horn , but the echoes of the rocks alone replied in prolonged reverberations to the sound . Then we shouted together , and again the echoes ...
James Grant. gree an ell long ; but wind your horn , and then let us shout . ' Callum blew his horn , but the echoes of the rocks alone replied in prolonged reverberations to the sound . Then we shouted together , and again the echoes ...
Страница 31
... wind , and rushed headlong towards the cascade . In deadly terror , the portly baronet had thrown himself off this fierce and shaggy little charger , but too late ; he was just at the edge of the fall over which the pony went headlong ...
... wind , and rushed headlong towards the cascade . In deadly terror , the portly baronet had thrown himself off this fierce and shaggy little charger , but too late ; he was just at the edge of the fall over which the pony went headlong ...
Страница 35
... wind was lifting the light leaves of the silver birches , and rustling the wiry foliage of the Scottish pines that clothed the steep sides of the lovely valley . At times a roebuck started up from among the green and waving bracken , to ...
... wind was lifting the light leaves of the silver birches , and rustling the wiry foliage of the Scottish pines that clothed the steep sides of the lovely valley . At times a roebuck started up from among the green and waving bracken , to ...
Страница 48
... wind , sheep with the rot , cattle with the murrain , hard times , and so forth . He read it over - smiled faintly , and after carefully folding and docketing it , he seated himself at a table which was placed in front of the house ...
... wind , sheep with the rot , cattle with the murrain , hard times , and so forth . He read it over - smiled faintly , and after carefully folding and docketing it , he seated himself at a table which was placed in front of the house ...
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Често срещани думи и фрази
Allan Mac Innon amid arms Bagnio baronet beautiful Black Watch bonnet brave caiques Callum Dhu Captain Clavering Catanagh Celtic Celts CHAPTER charming colonel Craig-na-tuirc dark dear deer devil Dioul Ephraim Snaggs evicted exclaimed eyes face Fanny Clavering father fellow fierce fire Gaelic girl gleam glen Glen Ora Greek hand head heard heart heather heaven Heraclea Highland hills hundred Hussein Iola Jack Belton Jerada knew land Laura Everingham light Loch Mac Fee Mac Ian Mac Innon Mashallah mercy Minnie Miss Clavering Miss Everingham Moolah mother mountain Moustapha never night old Mhari Osmanli pale passed piastres pistol pony poor pretty replied rocks Rodosdchig rose round ruined Scottish sea of Marmora seemed shot Sir Horace smile Snobleigh soldier spirit Stone of Scone stones stood strange terrible terror thought Turkish Turks voice whispered white stag wild Yuze Bashi
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Страница 401 - With a sweet emotion; Nothing in the world is single; All things by a law divine In one another's being mingle. Why not I with thine?-— See the mountains kiss high Heaven And the waves clasp one another; No sister flower would be forgiven If it disdained its brother; And the sunlight clasps the earth And the moonbeams kiss the sea: What are all these kissings worth If thou kiss not me?
Страница 332 - PRAISE be to God, the Lord of all creatures, the most merciful, the king of the day of judgment. Thee do we worship, and of thee do we beg assistance. Direct us in the right way, in the way of those to whom thou hast been gracious ; not of those against whom thou art incensed, nor of those who go astray...
Страница 266 - SAY : O unbelievers,* I will not worship that which ye worship ; nor will ye worship that which I worship. Neither do I worship that which ye worship ; neither do ye worship that which I worship. Ye have your religion, and I my religion.
Страница 164 - But here, - above, around, below, On mountain or in glen, Nor tree, nor shrub, nor plant, nor flower, Nor aught of vegetative power, The weary eye may ken. For all is rocks at random thrown, Black waves, bare crags, and banks of stone...
Страница 40 - Fillet of a fenny snake, In the caldron boil and bake : Eye of newt, and toe of frog, Wool of bat, and tongue of dog, Adder's fork, and blind-worm's sting, Lizard's leg, and owlet's wing, For a charm of powerful trouble ; Like a hell-broth boil and bubble.
Страница 398 - ... but rivals she has none. Lone and different as the moon in a heaven full of stars, she remains in the world of that man's heart. He has known other women, and he has known her. It may be the love of his youth, or the wife of his old age — first love or last love, it matters not. The love, the one love that fulfils all the exigencies of illusion, all the charms of sense, and all the pleasures of companionship, comes but once in man's lifetime. The rest are substitutes, makeshifts for love ;...
Страница 21 - The gentle mind is like the smooth stream which reflects every object in its just proportion and in its fairest colours. Beware of those rash and dangerous connexions which may afterwards load you with dishonour. Blind must that man be who discerns not the most striking marks of a Divine government exercised over the world.
Страница 398 - The woman who is so loved may have successors, as she has had predecessors ; but rivals she has none. Lone and different as the moon in a heaven full of stars, she remains in the world of that man's heart. He has known other women, and he has known her. It may be the love of his youth, or the wife of his old age — first love or last love, it matters not. The love, the one love that fulfils all the exigencies of illusion, all the charms of sense, and all the pleasures of companionship, comes but...
Страница 263 - Keppoch in ruin is left to deplore, And my country is waste from the hill to the shore, Be it so! By St Mary there's comfort in store! Though the braes of Lochaber a desert be made, And Glen Roy...
Страница 311 - And his fame went throughout all Syria. It is not easy to fix the exact bounds of Syria in the time of our Saviour. It was, perhaps, the general name for the country lying between the Euphrates on the east, and the Mediterranean on the west ; and between mount Taurus on the north, and Arabia on the south.