The Metropolitan, Volym 21James Cochrane, 1838 |
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... honour- able title of " the Lady Anne , " being daughter to the Earl of Lovell , one of the proudest peers of England ; by whom , on her rash marriage at sixteen with the younger son of one of Cromwell's upstart generals , she had been ...
... honour- able title of " the Lady Anne , " being daughter to the Earl of Lovell , one of the proudest peers of England ; by whom , on her rash marriage at sixteen with the younger son of one of Cromwell's upstart generals , she had been ...
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... honour , in sickness and in health , to take for richer for poorer , for better for worse , -I superadd a pledge that , knowing the poorer , and having experience of the worse , I would still bear all , and more also , for your sake ...
... honour , in sickness and in health , to take for richer for poorer , for better for worse , -I superadd a pledge that , knowing the poorer , and having experience of the worse , I would still bear all , and more also , for your sake ...
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... honour , both of the queen and the duchess . Who was this Miss Lovell that smiled so insolently as she walked a minuet with the young Duke of Monmouth , after fixing the admiring attention of Grammont and all his satellites ? -an ...
... honour , both of the queen and the duchess . Who was this Miss Lovell that smiled so insolently as she walked a minuet with the young Duke of Monmouth , after fixing the admiring attention of Grammont and all his satellites ? -an ...
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... honoured . " Did you know that those people in the north were still alive ? My aunt informed me at Paris , ( on my inquiry about them on some occasion or other , ) that they were all swept away by an in- undation — a conflagration - or ...
... honoured . " Did you know that those people in the north were still alive ? My aunt informed me at Paris , ( on my inquiry about them on some occasion or other , ) that they were all swept away by an in- undation — a conflagration - or ...
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... honour and the ermine . Not that he was unconcerned or inactive in the last great strife of thirty years , or came up when the parallels were run , and the outworks carried . True , he was not of the Continued from vol . xx . p . 247 ...
... honour and the ermine . Not that he was unconcerned or inactive in the last great strife of thirty years , or came up when the parallels were run , and the outworks carried . True , he was not of the Continued from vol . xx . p . 247 ...
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admiration Agnesia appearance arms beautiful better Bill called captain character cloudy command cried dark daughter dear deck delightful Dick Dawson duty Earl eyes Fausta favour feeling fortune frigate gentleman give hand happy head heard heart honour hope hour House improvements Iona labour lady Lancashire Leontio lieutenant light living London looked Lord Lord Brougham Lord G Lord Glenelg Lord John Russell Lordships Louis Perrin Lovell House Lower Canada Maltravers manner matter mind Miss Malford Miss Ogleby months morning mother motion nature never night noble O'Connell officers once Otto party passed person poor present Ramsay rendered replied RICHARD HOWITT Rose round Saville scarcely scene seemed ship Sir Peregrine smile soon Spartacus speech spirit Stapleton stood Street thee thing thou thought tion took Ursel Venice voice Warnford whole Wirbel words young youth
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Sida 126 - House, for the patience with which they have heard me now move, — That an humble Address be presented to her Majesty, praying that her Majesty will be graciously pleased to direct...
Sida 323 - Nor wanting, at wide intervals, the bulk Of ancient minster lifted above the cloud Of the dense air, which town or city breeds To intercept the sun's glad beams...
Sida 230 - Nothing can convince tyrants of their folly but gunpowder and steel, so put your trust in God my boys and keep your powder dry.
Sida 125 - House and the public may be able to place reliance; and declaring, with all deference to the constitutional prerogative of the Crown, that her Majesty's present Secretary of State for the Colonies does not enjoy the confidence of this House or of the country.
Sida 55 - Duncan is in his grave; After life's fitful fever he sleeps well; Treason has done his worst: nor steel, nor poison, Malice domestic, foreign levy, nothing Can touch him further.
Sida 356 - ¡sa remarkably fine-looking man. He is about the usual height, and of good figure. His countenance is mild and pleasant, and has a highly intellectual expression. His eyes are clear and quick. His eyebrows are dark and rather prominent. There is not a dandy in the House but envies what Truefit would call his
Sida 70 - ... deeds done in the body, whether they be good or whether they be evil...
Sida 273 - Alas ! the love of women ! it is known To be a lovely and a fearful thing ; For all of theirs upon that die is thrown, And if 'tis lost, life hath no more to bring To them but mockeries of the past alone...
Sida 109 - What mortal eye can fix'd behold? Who stalks his round, an hideous form, Howling amidst the midnight storm ; Or throws him on the ridgy steep Of some loose hanging rock to sleep...
Sida 77 - Lordship would often say that he better liked Mr. Hobbes's taking his thoughts, than any of the others, because he understood what he wrote, which the others not understanding, my Lord would many times have a hard task to make sense of what they writt.