PlaysTicknor and Fields, 1855 - 62 sidor |
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Vanliga ord och fraser
50 cents 63 cents A-dolph aint ANNA CORA MOWATT Antony beautiful Blan Catteraugus charming child Cloth Colonel Howard conservatory Count Jolimaitre Countess counting house crosses D'Ant Dame Babette dance dare daughter dear dress DUKE D'ANTIN Enter MILLINETTE Enter ZEKE Exeunt Exit ZEKE fashion father flowers Fogg frock coat Gertrude girl gracious hand hast hath hear heart heaven honor JAQUELINE King knew lady liege look Louis XV Madam Mademoiselle Majesty Mam'selle Blanche marry Monsieur Antoine Monsieur Le Sage Monsieur Zeke never nigger pardon Paris plebeian POEMS pray Price 50 Price 63 Price 75 cents Prudence Rich Richelieu Sera Seraphina Sire Snob Snobson speak supper sure talk tell thee there's thine thou thought told True TRUEMAN TWICE-TOLD TALES Twin Twinkle walking woman word WRITINGS young
Populära avsnitt
Sida 3 - Cloth. Price $1.50. SIR LAUNFAL. New Edition. Price 25 cents. A FABLE FOR CRITICS. New Edition. Price 50 cents.
Sida 60 - Howe'er it be, it seems to me, Tis only noble to be good. Kind hearts are more than coronets, And simple faith than Norman blood.
Sida 3 - NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE'S WRITINGS. TWICE-TOLD TALES. Two Volumes. Price $1.50. THE SCARLET LETTER. Price 75 cents. THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. Price $1.00. THE SNOW IMAGE, AND OTHER TWICE-TOLD TALES. Price 75 cents. THE BLITHEDALE ROMANCE. * Price 75 cents.
Sida 6 - BAYARD TAYLOR. POEMS. Cloth. Price 63 cents. JOHN G. SAXE. POEMS. With Portrait. Boards, 63 cents. Cloth, 75 cents. HENRY T. TUCKERMAN. POEMS. Cloth. Price 75 cents. BO WRING'S MATINS AND VESPERS. Price 50 cents. GEORGE LUNT. LYRIC POEMS, &c. 1 vol. Cloth, 63 cents.
Sida 66 - This fashion-worship has made heathens and hypocrites of you all! Deception is your household God! A man laughs as if he were crying, and cries as if he were laughing in his sleeve. Everything is something else from what it seems to be. I have lived in your house only three days, and I've heard more lies than were ever invented during a Presidential election!
Sida 66 - GERTRUDE: [Musingly] Friday night, while supper is serving, he is to meet Millinette here and explain — what? This man is an impostor! His insulting me — his familiarity with Millinette — his whole conduct — prove it. If I tell Mrs. Tiffany this she will disbelieve me, and one word may place this so-called Count on his guard. To convince Seraphina would be equally difficult, and her rashness and infatuation may render her miserable for life. No— she shall be saved! I must devise some plan...
Sida 66 - Now, Seraphina my dear, don't be too particular in your attentions to gentlemen not eligible. There is Count Jolimaitre, decidedly the most fashionable foreigner in town, — and so refined,— so much accustomed to associate with the first nobility in his own country that he can hardly tolerate the vulgarity of Americans in general. You may devote yourself to him. Mrs. Proudacre is dying to become acquainted with him. By the by, if she or her daughters should happen to drop in, be sure you don't...
Sida 66 - Fly? Ah! trompeur! Vat for you fly from Paris? Vat for you leave me— and I love you so much? Ven you sick — you almost die — did I not stay by you — take care of you — and you have no else friend? Vat for you leave Paris? Count: Never allude to disagreeable subjects, mon enfant!
Sida 66 - I have my mania, — as some wise person declares that all mankind have, — and mine is a love of independence! In Geneva, my wants were supplied by two kind old maiden ladies, upon whom I know not that I have any claim.
Sida 66 - Royale, or if you had lived in London — felt at home at St. James's, and every afternoon driven a couple of Lords and a Duchess through Hyde Park, you would find America — where you have no kings, queens, lords, nor ladies — insupportable!