| 1874 - 834 sider
...good behaviour of an Irish Parliament. This proceeding on their part reminds one of the song : ' " Will you walk into my parlour ? " said the spider to the fly.' To expect that the ^Protestant party would accept such an invitation is of a piece with their other... | |
| 1874 - 898 sider
...good behaviour of an Irish Parliament. This proceeding on their part reminds one of the song : ' " Will you walk into my parlour ? " said the spider to the fly.' To expect that the Protestant party would accept such an invitation is of a piece with their other... | |
| Child life - 1874 - 300 sider
...when he next doth ride abroad, May I be there to see. — William Cowper. THE SPIDER AND THE FLY. " WILL you walk into my parlour ? " Said the spider to the fly ; '"Tis the prettiest little parlour That ever you did spy ; The way into my parlor Is up a winding... | |
| Alfonzo Gardiner - 1874 - 72 sider
...Dis-miss. Lesson 94.— Thursday Morning. Grammar. Write. EXERCISE. — Write out ALL the nouns you can. "Will you walk into my parlour said the spider to the fly." Speak in a whisper. Your tone of voice is very loud. Hark, I hear a sound in the distance. What a pain... | |
| mrs. Francis G Faithfull - 1875 - 378 sider
...thoughts recurring, as they often did, to the difference the child had made in her life. CHAPTER VIII. ' Will you walk into my parlour ? said the spider to the fly ; 'Tis the prettiest little parlour that ever you did spy.' WAS told I should certainly be turned out,'... | |
| Maria Henrietta De la Cherois-Crommelin - 1875 - 344 sider
...half-finished sentence, and on Madame's pale face ; whereat our friend gave an astonished, broad grin. " Will you walk into my parlour, said the spider to the fly," he quoted under his breath, still staring at the door ; and then with a relieved air betook himself... | |
| Eliza Coates - 1875 - 138 sider
...chance. Somehow, I never see that lamp without thinking of some lines I learned, beginning with — ' Will you walk into my parlour ? Said the spider to the fly.'" Mabel could not help laughing. " There goes the fly ! " exclaimed her brother, as he watched a customer... | |
| William Wilberforce Newton - 1878 - 108 sider
...always think of them as having a parlour of their own, because we all remember that little song : ' Will you walk into my parlour ? Said the spider to the fly : 'T is the prettiest little parlour That ever you did spy.' And just as spiders now-a-days come into... | |
| William Darrah - 1878 - 208 sider
...Spider, look out ! the fly is coming. [En ter ETHEL.] (Humming as if she did not notice her coming): " Will you walk into my parlour, said the spider to the fly; " 'Tis the prettiest little parlour that ever you did spy." ETHEL. Good evening, Florence, you seem... | |
| John William Kirton - 1878 - 292 sider
...bubble that passes away.' THE SPIDER AND THE FLY. [Cheerful, vigorout, and with care in the dialogue.] " Will you walk into my parlour ?" said the Spider to the Fly; " 'Tis the prettiest little parlour that ever you did spy ; The way into my parlour is up a winding... | |
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