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Sida 26
... ? Are Are you alive ? Here's my hat all smashed ! And - good gracious ! my coat torn behind ! it's very , very wrong in people to leave such animals loose , and they ought to be fined , imprisoned ! Oh , me ! 26 WIDOWS AND.
... ? Are Are you alive ? Here's my hat all smashed ! And - good gracious ! my coat torn behind ! it's very , very wrong in people to leave such animals loose , and they ought to be fined , imprisoned ! Oh , me ! 26 WIDOWS AND.
Sida 27
... Mr. Gadsden , your hat is only converted into a shovel ; -if Mr. Gadsden chooses to leave you , madam , I cannot - you will find no one at the hall my friend Floyer is away , but at all 0 2 WIDOWERS . 27 to be fined, imprisoned! Oh, me! ...
... Mr. Gadsden , your hat is only converted into a shovel ; -if Mr. Gadsden chooses to leave you , madam , I cannot - you will find no one at the hall my friend Floyer is away , but at all 0 2 WIDOWERS . 27 to be fined, imprisoned! Oh, me! ...
Sida 63
... leave their places for six months afterwards . The sta- tute , or mop , was thronged by cattle , bul- locks especially ; a frightful mass of horns and hoofs were entangled in the Bull - ring , or market - place ; whilst a procession of ...
... leave their places for six months afterwards . The sta- tute , or mop , was thronged by cattle , bul- locks especially ; a frightful mass of horns and hoofs were entangled in the Bull - ring , or market - place ; whilst a procession of ...
Sida 103
... leave such a party as this ! " She was interrupted by the silent offer of Mr. Eustace's arm . Adeline had accepted the other and in a few moments they found them- selves on the Northington road , Loftus being left to follow on horseback ...
... leave such a party as this ! " She was interrupted by the silent offer of Mr. Eustace's arm . Adeline had accepted the other and in a few moments they found them- selves on the Northington road , Loftus being left to follow on horseback ...
Sida 109
... trees , with an underwood of laurels with their varnished leaves , and of roses . The place looked much larger than it really was ; yet was it large enough to comprise many beau- ties ; -to the florist some luxuries . The ex- WIDOWERS .
... trees , with an underwood of laurels with their varnished leaves , and of roses . The place looked much larger than it really was ; yet was it large enough to comprise many beau- ties ; -to the florist some luxuries . The ex- WIDOWERS .
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Widows and Widowers. A Romance of Real Life, Volym 2 Katherine Thomson Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1842 |
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added Adeline's admiration Ardham asked baronet beautiful Bernal Brooksbank called carriage character church comfort Coughton countenance cousin cried Adeline Curate daugh daughter dear death door dows drawing-room Eustace Floyer exclaimed eyes face fancy father feelings felt Fortescue Gadsden gentleman girl grave hand happy head hear heard heart Heneage honour husband Jones knew Lady Ellen Lady Gertrude Lady Hippisley Lady Theodora Lady Tyrawley Lady Wentworth Lawson Loftus looked Louisa madam married Martin Millicent mind Miss Meadows Miss Williams mother never night Northington once parterres passed perhaps poor Powell quadrille racter replied Adeline returned round scene servants Sir Horace Sir Tufton smile speak spirit spoke Stanhope Floyer stood sure Swindon talk tears tell thing thought tion tone took turned voice walked whilst wife window wish Wolstone woman Woodcote words young
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Sida 85 - Tis certain, greatness once fall'n out with fortune, Must fall out with men too ; what the declin'd is, He shall as soon read in the eyes of others As feel in his own fall ; for men, like butterflies. Shew not their mealy wings but to the summer.
Sida 218 - Too late I stayed ; forgive the crime ; Unheeded flew the hours ; How noiseless falls the foot of Time That only treads on flowers ! What eye with clear account remarks The ebbing of the glass, When all the sands are diamond sparks That dazzle as they pass
Sida 118 - VII. When remedies are past, the griefs are ended ; By seeing the worst, which late on hopes depended. To mourn a mischief that is past and gone Is the best way to bring new mischief on.
Sida 185 - Happy is England ! I could be content To sec no other verdure than its own ; To feel no other breezes than are blown Through its tall woods with high romances blent : Happy is England
Sida 266 - On the part of the prosecution a great deal of evidence has been laid before you. It is all circumstantial evidence, and in its nature it must be so, for in cases of this sort no man is weak enough to commit the act in the presence of other persons
Sida 339 - If any hopes thy bosom share But those which Love has planted there, Or any cares hut his thy breast enthrall ; Thou never yet his power hast known, Love sits on a despotic throne, And reigns a tyrant if he reigns at all.
Sida 5 - I long woo'd your daughter,—my suit you denied ;— Love swells like the Solway, but ebbs like its tide.
Sida 266 - satisfactory than any other kind of evidence, because it is not within the reach and compass of human abilities to invent a train of circumstances which shall be so connected together as to amount to a proof of guilt, without affording opportunities of contradicting a great part, if not all, of those circumstances. But if the circumstances are such as, when laid together, bring conviction
Sida 29 - me no reason why I love you, for though love use reason for his precision, he admits him not for his counsellor. Merry Wives
Sida 134 - O visions ill foreseen ! Better had I Lived ignorant of future ! so had borne My part of evil only, each day's lot Enough to bear