Passion and principleH.C. Carey and I. Lea, 1825 |
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Результати 1-5 із 47
Сторінка 19
... London , because she is too un- well ; and Mrs. Rodney is equally disqualified from hear- ing them , inasmuch as they would be forthwith convey- ed to her child ; such is the inherent communicativeness of her disposition , such the ever ...
... London , because she is too un- well ; and Mrs. Rodney is equally disqualified from hear- ing them , inasmuch as they would be forthwith convey- ed to her child ; such is the inherent communicativeness of her disposition , such the ever ...
Сторінка 25
... London on business - it may be -all I implore is - for with the best intentions I trem- ble for myself - do not subject me to a parting inter- view . " " I am going over to Lord Springfield's , " said Rod- ney . " Then God bless you ...
... London on business - it may be -all I implore is - for with the best intentions I trem- ble for myself - do not subject me to a parting inter- view . " " I am going over to Lord Springfield's , " said Rod- ney . " Then God bless you ...
Сторінка 26
... just at the moment the London coach arrived , to change horses : he spoke to the coachman , gave his portmanteau into his charge , and walked on- wards , desiring to be taken up at the outside 26 PASSION AND PRINCIPLE .
... just at the moment the London coach arrived , to change horses : he spoke to the coachman , gave his portmanteau into his charge , and walked on- wards , desiring to be taken up at the outside 26 PASSION AND PRINCIPLE .
Сторінка 27
... London road ; and in less than a quarter of an hour he was seated on the roof of the stage , travelling towards the metropolis at the rate of ten miles an hour . CHAPTER III . Thou canst fight well and bravely ; PASSION AND PRINCIPLE . 27.
... London road ; and in less than a quarter of an hour he was seated on the roof of the stage , travelling towards the metropolis at the rate of ten miles an hour . CHAPTER III . Thou canst fight well and bravely ; PASSION AND PRINCIPLE . 27.
Сторінка 41
... has been allowed to come down into the parlour , Mrs. Rodney is preparing to make tea , and Welsted is thirty - three miles on his road to London . D 2 CHAPTER IV . " See , I am all obedience PASSION AND PRINCIPLE . 41.
... has been allowed to come down into the parlour , Mrs. Rodney is preparing to make tea , and Welsted is thirty - three miles on his road to London . D 2 CHAPTER IV . " See , I am all obedience PASSION AND PRINCIPLE . 41.
Загальні терміни та фрази
academy affection agitated agreeable amiable appearance bell boys called Cape Town carriage child command conduct Cordelia Countess daugh daughter dear delighted desire dinner Dixon door dreadful duty earl excellency excellency's eyes Fanny's father feelings felt Francis Welsted Frank gaiety girl Grosvenor Square Hackney hand happiness Harriet heard heart honour hope husband India knew Lady Brashleigh Lady Maria ladyship letter London look lord Feversham lordship Ma'am Major Mims manner ment mind Miss Tickle Montgomery Place morning Mounsheer mutton never night noble nonsense verses object opera pale parents party perfectly perhaps person poor Fanny portmanteau present proceeded racter received recollect Rodney Rodney's Ronfleur Rutherford seemed servant ship Sir Fre Sir Frederick Brashleigh society Somerville House sorrow sted sure tears thing thought Tickle's Tiffin tion uncon usher Viscount waiter Walford Welsted's wife young ladies
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Сторінка 118 - tis gone for aye. POLLY. The boy, thus, when his sparrow's flown, The bird in silence eyes; But soon as out of sight 'tis gone, Whines, whimpers, sobs and cries.
Сторінка 28 - I have stood and viewed thee mow away like rushes, And still kill the killer : were thy mind But half so sweet in peace as rough in dangers, I died to leave a happy heir behind me. Come, strike, and be a general.
Сторінка 62 - ... em, their limbs faint, Their senses dull, their seeing, hearing, going, All dead before them; yea, their very teeth, Their instruments of eating, failing them; Yet this is reckoned life! Nay, here was one, Is now gone home, that wishes to live longer! Feels not his gout, nor palsy; feigns himself Younger by scores of years, flatters his age With confident belying it, hopes he may With charms, like Aeson...
Сторінка 135 - ... his open hands, and covering his eyes prayed for support in this hour of trial. The appeal was conclusive. Morality and honour were already combined to check his progress ; but when Religion came to his aid, and he considered that, in the sight of his Maker, his conduct could not be reconcilable with the duty he owed to Rodney ; when he remembered that, to gratify his own passions, he was about to induce her, whom he fondly loved, to violate a still more sacred duty than that which it had been...
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Сторінка 103 - O call not to my mind what you have done ; It sets a debt of that account before me, Which shows me poor, and bankrupt even in hopes.
Сторінка 44 - The mind, when overcharged, droops as it were ; and like the rose suffused with evening dew, seeks, if I may be allowed the expression, support from its kindred branches. I have much to tell, and much to ask of you.
Сторінка 172 - Press of heaven is unceasingly at work — night and day; the only free power all over the world — 'tis indeed like the air we breathe — if we have it not, we die.