Terisina. The lovers' quarrel. Faithful and forsaken. Wild water pond. The pic-nic. Chatelar. Lady Betty's pocketbook. Insurance and assurance. The album. Benedetti's adieu. Authors and editors. The Moorish barqueH. Colburn, 1837 |
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Side 44
... believe so pure . A moral might be drawn from it of deep import , but it has brought its punishment , and I am not one to apply bitter truths to a heart that is bleed- ing . Let me rather counsel you that one mis- take of passion may ...
... believe so pure . A moral might be drawn from it of deep import , but it has brought its punishment , and I am not one to apply bitter truths to a heart that is bleed- ing . Let me rather counsel you that one mis- take of passion may ...
Side 54
... believe you threatened me that you would . Pray , have you run away from battle to be as good as your word ? " " " And pray , did you always consider it a threat , or did you tell me that this grotto should be your hermitage till my ...
... believe you threatened me that you would . Pray , have you run away from battle to be as good as your word ? " " " And pray , did you always consider it a threat , or did you tell me that this grotto should be your hermitage till my ...
Side 68
... believe him serious , and if he was , he would soon repent . " And now , " she interrupted him , relapsing into her loveliest look of raillery , " Childe Wil- ful would be glad of his picture again ? ” " You certainly will oblige me by ...
... believe him serious , and if he was , he would soon repent . " And now , " she interrupted him , relapsing into her loveliest look of raillery , " Childe Wil- ful would be glad of his picture again ? ” " You certainly will oblige me by ...
Side 98
... believe That thou wert made for tenderness and virtue , And walk'd in crime by accident . Alas ! I can but pay thy labour with my thanks . A Prison . EUSTACHE AND GUARD . Eus . The hours pass slowly - tell me , if you will , How near my ...
... believe That thou wert made for tenderness and virtue , And walk'd in crime by accident . Alas ! I can but pay thy labour with my thanks . A Prison . EUSTACHE AND GUARD . Eus . The hours pass slowly - tell me , if you will , How near my ...
Side 101
... believe That thou wert wed to never - dying faith , Which , shadow - like , would follow all thy fortunes With equal steps - presumptuous aspirant ! What claim had'st thou to excellence so far Above the reach of more deserving men ? Thy ...
... believe That thou wert wed to never - dying faith , Which , shadow - like , would follow all thy fortunes With equal steps - presumptuous aspirant ! What claim had'st thou to excellence so far Above the reach of more deserving men ? Thy ...
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Terisina. the Lovers' Quarrel. Faithful and Forsaken. Wild Water Pond. the ... Robert Sulivan Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2019 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
66 REASON acquaintance age of love amongst Annabelle answer appearance Barbara barouche barque beauty blood bosom bright eyes Carrol Chatelar cheek cormorant dare dark dear door doubt drop Eustache exclaimed eyes fancied fate favour fear feeling felt forget fortune Frederic friends gazed genius gentle GERAULT give grace hand happy hath head hear heard heart heaven Holyrood hopes horse hour knew Lady Betty LADY CHARLOTTE BURY Lady Sibyl lady-mother Latian leave LEICESTER SQUARE lips listen looked Lord love-lies-bleeding lover Lucy Lucy's maid Marchese marriage Mathilde ment mind mortification never NUMBER o'er obliged once pity pride scarcely scene seemed sight Sir Lubin smile sorrow soul spect spirit stood sweet tears tell Teresina thee THEODORE HOOK thing thou thought tion toil told turned Twas voice whilst whither Wild Water Pond wonder words young
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Side 50 - Alas ! — how light a cause may move Dissension between hearts that love ! Hearts that the world in vain had tried, And sorrow but more closely tied ; That stood the storm, when waves were rough, Yet in a sunny hour fall off, Like ships that have gone down at sea, When heaven was all tranquillity...
Side 256 - The widow looked comically at the recollections which I brought to her mind; her rosy lips began to disclose their treasures in a half smile ; and this, in turn, expanded into a laugh like the laugh of Euphrosyne. This was the very thing for me. I...
Side 249 - The directors turned their eyes towards me with evident satisfaction, and I had the vanity to believe that the widow did so too. " You have a good broad chest," said one. " I dare say your lungs are never affected." " Good shoulders too," said another. "Not likely to he knocked down in a row." " Strong in the legs, and not debilitated by dissipation," cried a third. "I think this gentleman will suit us.
Side 246 - I am the strongest man in Ireland." " But subject to the gout?" "No. — The rheumatism. — Nothing else, upon my soul." "What age was your father when he died?" "Oh, he died young; but then he was killed in a row." "Have you any uncles alive?" "No: they were all killed in rows too.
Side 244 - ... undisturbed when surrounded by a pack of terriers which seemed hungry enough to devour one another? Whenever the door slammed, and they looked for an addition to their cry, they seemed for all the world as though they were going to bark ; and if a straggler really...
Side 54 - Sweet arrogance ! is it not the day three thousand years on which we parted ; and did I not promise to be here at sunset?
Side 231 - ... every thought was poetry. A scrap of paper lay upon the table, and was presently enriched with a sonnet on each side, which I had the vanity to think were quite good enough to be transferred to Lady Betty's most beloved and lilac pocket-book. I raised my eyes, and, lo! in the bustle of parting with Lord S , she had forgotten to deposit it in her desk. What an agreeable surprise it would be for her to find how I had been employed! How fondly would she thank me for such a delicate mode of showing...
Side 251 - I will take you that she makes me a sedate married man in less than two months." "Done!" said cormorant, his features again straining their buckskins at the idea of having made a double profit of me. " Let us go to my house, and I will draw a deed to that cfiect, gratis.
Side 224 - ... cruel to postpone my declaration, but though I have no Scotch blood in my veins, I was always a little given to caution. Lady Betty had been a sad madcap, and might not this be a mere freak of the moment? Besides there was a charm about the very uncertainty Which a declared lover has no idea of, so I determined to observe, and act with deliberation. Our pastimes continued the same as before, and our interchanges of kindness increased. Amongst other things, Lady Betty signalized me by a purse...
Side 221 - Now Barbara was a good horsewoman, and Betty was a bad one ; consequently, Barbara rode a pony, and Betty rode a donkey; consequently, Barbara rode a mile before, and Betty rode a mile behind ; and consequently, it was absolutely necessary for me to keep fast hold of Betty's hand, for fear she should tumble off. Thus did we journey through wood and through valley, by flood and by field, through the loveliest and most love-making scenes that ever figured in rhyme or on canvas.