Strathallan, Bind 31816 |
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Side 10
... dear , much good may it do you with your cousin , cousin , and your little romp Emily , who is now , I suppose , grown good Queen Emma , and your nun , and your dog , and your cat ; you are all , I think , suited for each other . Heaven ...
... dear , much good may it do you with your cousin , cousin , and your little romp Emily , who is now , I suppose , grown good Queen Emma , and your nun , and your dog , and your cat ; you are all , I think , suited for each other . Heaven ...
Side 15
... dear Mrs. Melbourne , you should not shut yourself up in this way , as I may say , from all your friends ; now how comes it that all the time you have been in town you never once thought of ordering your carriage my way . " " Mrs ...
... dear Mrs. Melbourne , you should not shut yourself up in this way , as I may say , from all your friends ; now how comes it that all the time you have been in town you never once thought of ordering your carriage my way . " " Mrs ...
Side 16
... as I hear from Lady Torrendale that you keep a school . " " Lady Torrendale ! " exclaimed Ma- tilda in unfeigned astonishment : " believe me , dear madam , you are misinformed . " Oh , I knew ' tis only amongst our- selves 16 STRATHALLan .
... as I hear from Lady Torrendale that you keep a school . " " Lady Torrendale ! " exclaimed Ma- tilda in unfeigned astonishment : " believe me , dear madam , you are misinformed . " Oh , I knew ' tis only amongst our- selves 16 STRATHALLan .
Side 17
... dear Miss Melbourne , is to have ' em taught to get into a carriage elegantly , and put on a shawl prettily , and play cards . well , and pick a bone the Paris fashion , and crack a whip , and manage their opera glass . And for the ...
... dear Miss Melbourne , is to have ' em taught to get into a carriage elegantly , and put on a shawl prettily , and play cards . well , and pick a bone the Paris fashion , and crack a whip , and manage their opera glass . And for the ...
Side 24
... dear ma'am , said I , quite worn out with her obstinate determina- tion to be pleased ; " Don't you see it is evident the man is quite anxious to get off ; and that if you would give up Vinesbury to keep him , he would resign ...
... dear ma'am , said I , quite worn out with her obstinate determina- tion to be pleased ; " Don't you see it is evident the man is quite anxious to get off ; and that if you would give up Vinesbury to keep him , he would resign ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
admiration Alcæus allan amusement appearance Arbella beautiful calm Captain Fitzroy charms Clara continued conversation countenance Countess cousin cried dear delighted Derbyshire Emily engaged exclaimed expression eyes fair fear feelings Fitzroy forget gaiety gentlemen give glance grace hand happy hear heart honour hope idea indulge interrupted Lady Strathallan Lady Tor Lady Torrendale Ladyship least length look Lord Strathallan Lord Torrendale Madam Major O'Hara manner Marionelli Matilda Melbourne's ment mind Miss De Courcy Miss Ferrars Miss Hautenville Miss Langrish Miss Melbourne Miss Mountain never night observed once passion perceived pleasure poor regret rendale replied resumed Rocks Sappho scene seemed Sir Harold smile soon soul Sowerby Spencer spirit Stockwell Stockwell's Strath sure Swanley sweet tell tender tessellated thing thou thought tilda tion tone Torrendale's Tunbridge turned Virgil's tomb voice whispered whole wish woman Woodlands words young lady
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Side 7 - played with a running accompaniment of one, and two, and three, — and one, and two, and three, — and" — is a good landmark; it shows the future style of the artist, his way of treating feature and expression, his touch, his ingenuity in handling accessories, and that neatness of his legends and inscriptions which never forsook him. In the fifth volume, toward the close of 1843, there is a picture...
Side 83 - Fixt on fair Lothian's fertile dale, Attends his human sacrifice, Without the Grecian painter's veil. O married love ! thy bard shall own, Where two congenial souls unite, Thy golden chain inlaid with down, Thy lamp with heaven's own splendour bright. But if no radiant star of love, O Hymen ! smile on thy fair rite, Thy chain a wretched weight shall prove. Thy lamp a sad sepulchral light.
Side 104 - My mind by baseless trifles mov'd. Give me (thus high my pride I raise) The ploughman's or the gardener's praise, With patient and unceasing toil, To meliorate a stubborn soil. And say, (no higher meed I ask) With zeal hast thou perform'd thy task ? Praise, of which virtuous minds may boast, They best confer, who merit most.
Side 226 - I have the least success in my neighbors' eyes." Of course, pride had something to do with this ; " it was a wild stock of pride," as Burke said of Lord Keppel, "on which the tenderest of all hearts had grafted the milder virtues." Both pride and piety led him to write, — " Fame cannot tempt the bard Who 's famous with his God, Nor laurel him reward Who has his Maker's nod.
Side 133 - Gorgeous palaces," which had ex isted only in Sir Harold's own imagination, were no longer the subject of his boast. The rage of improvement had, with him, give" tray to that of antiquarianism. Some old coins,. and a small part of a very beautiful tessalated floor having lately been discovered near that spot, he was persuaded, that many remains of Roman magnificence la.y concealed there;. which, if those employed would use proper diligence, might be brought to light, and his whole conversation now...
Side 1 - There is a less obvious but more impressive example towards the end of the play when, after commiserating with Alceste on the loss of his lawsuit, Philinte proceeds to expound the virtues of his own philosophy: Tous ces defauts humains nous donnent dans la vie Des moyens d'exercer notre philosophic; C'est le plus bel emploi que trouve la vertu; Et si de probite...
Side 118 - Who hath not paused while beauty's pensive eye Asked from his heart the homage of a sigh ? Who hath not owned, with rapture-smitten frame, The power of grace, the magic of a name...
Side 206 - If thou woulds't view fair Melrose right, Go visit it by the pale moonlight; For the bright beams of the gladsome day Guild but to flaunt the ruins gray.