In strange companyVizetelly & Company, 1883 - 324 стор. |
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Сторінка 14
... morning , and what we gets when we gets home at night . " " And what do you then get ? 99 " Oh , all manners ; stews sometimes , " and his dirty little white face lit up at the glorious recollection . " Jolly fine stews they are , " put ...
... morning , and what we gets when we gets home at night . " " And what do you then get ? 99 " Oh , all manners ; stews sometimes , " and his dirty little white face lit up at the glorious recollection . " Jolly fine stews they are , " put ...
Сторінка 24
... morning school concluded , they are informed that they may run home and fetch their dinner things . On the Wednesday in question the feed was to be Irish stew , and the number of guests expected was about three hundred . Nothing may be ...
... morning school concluded , they are informed that they may run home and fetch their dinner things . On the Wednesday in question the feed was to be Irish stew , and the number of guests expected was about three hundred . Nothing may be ...
Сторінка 30
... morning ; but at the Golden Lane establish- ments a lodger is privileged to go to bed as dirty as he likes , and as a rule he avails himself to the full of the considerate arrangement . In this one lodging - house ninety occupants of ...
... morning ; but at the Golden Lane establish- ments a lodger is privileged to go to bed as dirty as he likes , and as a rule he avails himself to the full of the considerate arrangement . In this one lodging - house ninety occupants of ...
Сторінка 32
... morning , with their rags loaded with scarlet fever , to spread it through the town . The majority of these " hot - water " lodgers are cadgers and beggars by profession . It is not invariably because they cannot afford it , that they ...
... morning , with their rags loaded with scarlet fever , to spread it through the town . The majority of these " hot - water " lodgers are cadgers and beggars by profession . It is not invariably because they cannot afford it , that they ...
Сторінка 33
... morning . The doors of the casual wards will open to their knocking ; but in this tribe only your loafing scoundrel , who is too lazy even to beg , avails himself of the parochial asylum . The professional beggar finds that it does ...
... morning . The doors of the casual wards will open to their knocking ; but in this tribe only your loafing scoundrel , who is too lazy even to beg , avails himself of the parochial asylum . The professional beggar finds that it does ...
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ain't alley amongst appeared auctioneer bedstead beggars Bethnal Green bird Bit Alley blind bonnet boots bread Brummagem bundle cage chaffinch chignon Christmas colour costermonger creatures crowd Dazzler dirty door dozen dreadful Epsom town eyes face fact fair favoured feather feet fellow female finch floor flowers garotter gentleman green hair hands Hare Street head hole horse human hundred hundredweight John Galloper keep least live lodging London look manner means mouth never Newgate night Nymet Rowland Old Bailey pail perhaps pipe poor pots pound present prison public-house ragged Regan regards remarked round ruffian scores shabby shillings Shoreditch Railway Station Slaughter's song sort strange strange company Sunday morning tell thieves thing tramps turn Turnmill Turnmill Street villain wall woman women wretched yards young
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Сторінка 318 - PARIS HERSELF AGAIN. BY GEORGE AUGUSTUS SALA. WITH 350 CHARACTERISTIC ILLUSTRATIONS BY FRENCH ARTISTS. "On subjects like those in his present work, Mr. Sala is at his best." — The Times. " This book is one of the most readable that has appeared for many a day. Few Englishmen know so much of old and modern Paris as Mr. Sala.
Сторінка 92 - that that's the fashion at present among my tribe j sure all my brother puppies smoke now, and a man might as well be out of the world as 'out of the fashion, you know.
Сторінка 21 - The most favourite entertainment at this place is known as "tuff-ball" in which both sexes — innocent of clothing — madly join, stimulated with raw whisky and the music of a fiddle and a tin whistle.
Сторінка 320 - LIFE, AND SAVING A DAUGHTER'S DOWRY. By E. About. COLOMBA, AND CARMEN. By P. Merimee. A WOMAN'S DIARY, AND THE LITTLE COUNTESS. By 0. Feuillet. ODETTE'S MARRIAGE. By A. Delpit. THE TOWER OF PERCEMONT. By George Sand. BLUE-EYED META HOLDENIS. By V. Cherbuliez. THE GODSON OF A MARQUIS. By A. Theuriet.
Сторінка 318 - This book is one of the most readable that has appeared for many a day. Few Englishmen know so much of old and modern Paris as Mr. Sala. Endowed with a facility to extract humour from every phase of the world's stage, and blessed with a wondrous store of recondite lore, he outdoes himself when he deals with a city like Paris that he knows so well, and that affords such an opportunity for his pen."— Truth.
Сторінка 319 - PERIL," &c. Illustrated with an Exact Representation of the Diamond Necklace, from a Contemporary Drawing, and a Portrait of the Countess de la Motte, engraved on Steel. " Had the most daring of our sensational novelists put forth the present plain unvarnished statement of facts as a work of fiction, it would have been denounced as so violating all probabilities as to be a positive insult to the common sense of the reader.
Сторінка 319 - Public; and comprising a Sketch of the Life of the Countess de la Motte, pretended Confidant of Marie Antoinette, and Particulars of the Careers of the other Actors in this remarkable Drama. By HENRY VIZETELLY. Illustrated with an exact representation of the Diamond Necklace, and a Portrait of the Countess de la Motte, engraved on steel.
Сторінка 211 - Her skin was dusky yellow, and tightly drawn at the nostrils and the cheek bones ; and evidently she had, since her marriage, taken such a thoroughly Chinese view of life, that her organs of vision were fast losing their European shape, and assuming that which coincided with her adopted nature.
Сторінка 319 - Had the most daring of our sensational novelists put forth the present plain unvarnished statement of facts as a work of fiction, it would have been denounced as so violating all probabilities as to be a positive insult to the common sense of the reader. Yet strange, startling, incomprehensible as is the narrative which the author has here evolved, every word of it is true."— A otea and Querie*.
Сторінка 3 - ... laid out his little stock to dry. Ginger's delight, when the landlord brought in along with a big loaf the half of a huge Cheshire cheese, was a sight to behold ; his amazement when the landlord left the room, leaving the half-cheese behind him, I will not attempt to describe. ' He's forgot it, ain't he ? ' he said, handling his knife as though sadly tempted to make the most of the innkeeper's mistake by slicing off a pound or so. ' No, he hasn't forgotten, my lad,' said I, ' he'll fetch it away...