The New Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal, Bind 40Henry Colburn and Company, 1840 |
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Side 12
... beautiful parallel lines , of about three words each , in which she expressed to Mrs. Amersham the state of perilous uncertainty in which she was living ; promising to let her hear faithfully and punctually more about her views and ...
... beautiful parallel lines , of about three words each , in which she expressed to Mrs. Amersham the state of perilous uncertainty in which she was living ; promising to let her hear faithfully and punctually more about her views and ...
Side 21
... beautiful , that I was malicious enough to fancy it might be that important personage in a priest's household , known in France as " la nièce du curé " travestie en homme . From Varna , the remainder of our passage across the Black Sea ...
... beautiful , that I was malicious enough to fancy it might be that important personage in a priest's household , known in France as " la nièce du curé " travestie en homme . From Varna , the remainder of our passage across the Black Sea ...
Side 28
... beautiful , gentle , amiable , and accom- plished , with a steadiness and decorum remarkable for her years ; and with manners whose suavity never failed to conciliate the good opinion of those who had opportunities of knowing her . She ...
... beautiful , gentle , amiable , and accom- plished , with a steadiness and decorum remarkable for her years ; and with manners whose suavity never failed to conciliate the good opinion of those who had opportunities of knowing her . She ...
Side 37
... beautiful and innocent orphan . He proposed to procure , from the mechanics by whom it is employed , a quantity of wax of a peculiar tenacity , and to spread it very thick on a piece of linen . De Breteul was to enter Matilde's chamber ...
... beautiful and innocent orphan . He proposed to procure , from the mechanics by whom it is employed , a quantity of wax of a peculiar tenacity , and to spread it very thick on a piece of linen . De Breteul was to enter Matilde's chamber ...
Side 40
... beautiful Louise lay extended cold and motionless , but lovely even in death . The brother , nearly frantic , ordered the servants to fly for doc- tors , and commenced chafing her cold limbs , totally forgetting in this new and ...
... beautiful Louise lay extended cold and motionless , but lovely even in death . The brother , nearly frantic , ordered the servants to fly for doc- tors , and commenced chafing her cold limbs , totally forgetting in this new and ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
acquaintance admiration Amershams appearance beautiful black dog body Bruff Calais called character Charles Chesterfield colonel Constance Consumption daughter dear dear boy delight dinner disease door duchess duke Elizabeth Peters Ellen Emilius English Eupheme exclaimed eyes father favour feel fortune French gentleman girl give hand happy heard heart honour hour Hubert interest Italian Italy Jane lady Lady Morgan look Lord Lord Harry manner marriage matter means ment mind Miss Miss Mapleton morning mother Mozart nature never night Ninny O'Donagough once party passed patois Patty person Peter poison poor present racter Rattlebones reader remarkable replied scarcely seemed Sir George Sir Henry Seymour smile Smylar society soon sort spirit sure tell thing thought tion truth turn wife wine Winkey wish woman words young
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Side 114 - IN joyous youth, what soul hath never known Thought, feeling, taste, harmonious to its own ? Who hath not paused while Beauty's pensive eye Ask'd from his heart the homage of a sigh ? Who hath not own'd, with rapture-smitten frame, The power of grace, the magic of a name...
Side 364 - Thus every good his native wilds impart, Imprints the patriot passion on his heart; And e'en those ills, that round his mansion rise. Enhance the bliss his scanty fund supplies. Dear is that shed to which his soul conforms, And dear that hill which lifts him to the storms; And as a child, when scaring sounds molest, . . Clings close and closer to the mother's breast, So the loud torrent, and the whirlwind's roar, But bind him to his native mountains more.
Side 567 - Territory," performed by order of the domestic committee of the Board of Missions of the Protestant Episcopal church, in the spring of l844, by their secretary and general agent.
Side 251 - Yet at this very time, the horrid practice of poisoning was so common, that, during part of a season, a Praetor punished capitally for this crime above three thousand persons in a part of ITALY; and found informations of this nature still multiplying upon him. There is a similar, or rather a worse instance, in the more early times of the commonwealth. So depraved in private life were that people, whom in their histories we so much admire.
Side 245 - Mislike me not for my complexion, The shadowed livery of the burnished sun, To whom I am a neighbour and near bred. Bring me the fairest creature northward born, Where Phoebus...
Side 203 - A good Dinner is one of the greatest enjoyments of human life; — and as the practice of Cookery is attended with so many discouraging difficulties,* so many disgusting and disagreeable circumstances, and even dangers, we ought to have some regard for those who encounter them, to procure us pleasure, and to reward their attention by rendering their situation every way...
Side 118 - Arnaldo, Gaddo, and other unacknowledged poems by Lord Byron and some of his contemporaries, collected by Odoardo Volpi [pseud.].
Side 416 - I am now passing into another world, and I must leave you to your fortunes, and the queen's grace and goodness; but beware of the gipsy, (meaning Leicester,) for he will be too hard for you all, you know not the beast so well as I do.
Side 430 - Chaldsean saith : A time was when the universe was darkness and water, wherein certain animals of frightful and compound forms were generated. There were serpents and other creatures with the mixed shapes of one another, of which pictures are kept in the temple of Belus at Babylon.
Side 117 - Give me sacke, old sacke, boys, To make the muses merry. The life of mirth, and the joy of the earth, Is a cup of good old sherry.