Zeluca; Or, Educated and Uneducated Women: A Novel ...author, 1815 |
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Página 25
... cause against the superiority of sta- tion , that in inflicting a pesonal injury on one , touches all . And so effectual was her sauvity , that she had the pleasure of see- ing spontaneous indignation at the action was converted into ...
... cause against the superiority of sta- tion , that in inflicting a pesonal injury on one , touches all . And so effectual was her sauvity , that she had the pleasure of see- ing spontaneous indignation at the action was converted into ...
Página 84
... cause could I have expected to see a little girl of ten years old . " Zeluca answered that her Ladyship was mistaken as to receiving such false information from her , though she might possibly have derived the idea from seeing her look ...
... cause could I have expected to see a little girl of ten years old . " Zeluca answered that her Ladyship was mistaken as to receiving such false information from her , though she might possibly have derived the idea from seeing her look ...
Página 87
... angry at it . Anger was indeed too mild a term for the disturbance Zeluca ex- perienced at the cause of Lady Naglefort's visit , and she was so thoroughly pained at the I. 2 XELUCA . '87 compliment to Miss Bessaly, but merely ...
... angry at it . Anger was indeed too mild a term for the disturbance Zeluca ex- perienced at the cause of Lady Naglefort's visit , and she was so thoroughly pained at the I. 2 XELUCA . '87 compliment to Miss Bessaly, but merely ...
Página 97
... cause , did an individual make his way ; an insignificant Being would be humbled , to the lowest sense of humilia- tion , by the irony that would descant on the self - importance of bringing a puny cause before the cognizance of the ...
... cause , did an individual make his way ; an insignificant Being would be humbled , to the lowest sense of humilia- tion , by the irony that would descant on the self - importance of bringing a puny cause before the cognizance of the ...
Página 98
... causes for secession , which , three months after , are all sunk in a marriage with another , to whom the same objections apply ? -And do you call such , love - matches ? —I call them matches brought about by good management in the ...
... causes for secession , which , three months after , are all sunk in a marriage with another , to whom the same objections apply ? -And do you call such , love - matches ? —I call them matches brought about by good management in the ...
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Términos y frases comunes
admiration admitted amusement answered approbation ascer asked aunt Avonport ball beauty believe Captain Cassenberd cousin Cowerby cried Wolsey cried Zeluca dance daughter dear declaration delight Delvayne's Dereborough dread effectually encreased endeavouring envy Erde Erdestone Erdestone's exclaimed exhibited eyes favour fear feel felt flattering gave girl give governess Greystone happy heart hint honour hope imputed interrupted invitation Jane St knew Lady Bridget Lady Kitty Lady Nagle Lady Naglefort Lady Whitelock ladyship laughed looked Lord Edward luca Marianne's marriage Medlicott ment mind Miss Bessaly Miss Delvayne Miss Emcotts Miss Marlowe Miss O'Keefe Miss St morning mother natural never observed opinion pain passion pique pleasure portunity praise pursued recollected rendered repeated reply rianne shew Sir John Dawlish smile solicitude Spire sure temper thing thought tion tivated tokens tone trepan triumph turn uncon Valcrest vayne whispered wish Wolsey's woman young
Pasajes populares
Página 282 - He who hath bent him o'er the dead, Ere the first day of death is fled ; The first dark day of nothingness, The last of danger and distress...
Página 341 - Have oft-times no connexion. Knowledge dwells In heads replete with thoughts of other men ; Wisdom in minds attentive to their own. Knowledge, a rude unprofitable mass, The mere materials with which wisdom builds, Till smooth'd and squar'd and fitted to its place, Does but encumber whom it seems t
Página 1 - ... of Burnet's comparison between him and Tiberius ever felt, I imagine, by any one but its author. He was gay and affable, and, if incapable of the sentiments belonging to pride of a laudable sort, he was at least free from haughtiness and insolence. The praise of politeness, which the Stoics are not perhaps wrong in classing among the moral virtues, provided they admit it to be one of the lowest order, has never been denied him; and he had in an eminent degree that facility of temper which, though...
Página 64 - Immediate cause of pleasure. The good opinion of mankind, expressed in praise, pleases us by the same necessary and inexplicable laws according to which mutual affection pleases us, or according to which we are gratified by music, or the beauties and gales of spring. To a certain extent therefore it is innocent to admit the gratification of this desire, simply for the sake of this pleasure. But to what extent ? It is very apparent that this desire has, if I may so express it, an immense voracity.