Beauchamp: Or The Error, Volumen 2Smith, Elder and Company, 1848 |
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Página 34
... hear his friend Wolf qualify by so unsavoury an epithet a gentleman , whose friend and com- panion he had very lately been . The young officer , however , knew a good deal of the world and the world's ways , and he was not at all ...
... hear his friend Wolf qualify by so unsavoury an epithet a gentleman , whose friend and com- panion he had very lately been . The young officer , however , knew a good deal of the world and the world's ways , and he was not at all ...
Página 58
... hear an irruption of the Goths and Vandals making its way hither - which I can always discover by the creaking of the glass door - I retreat into that little room and fortify myself with lock and key , for I have no taste for mankind in ...
... hear an irruption of the Goths and Vandals making its way hither - which I can always discover by the creaking of the glass door - I retreat into that little room and fortify myself with lock and key , for I have no taste for mankind in ...
Página 67
... hear the gay birds singing without ; the thrush upon the tree top ; the woodlark in the shade ; the linnet , with its small , sweet song , and the chaffinch in his spring dress and his spring notes amongst the bushes . She opened the ...
... hear the gay birds singing without ; the thrush upon the tree top ; the woodlark in the shade ; the linnet , with its small , sweet song , and the chaffinch in his spring dress and his spring notes amongst the bushes . She opened the ...
Página 78
... hear Mary Clifford defend herself , and so warmly too , from the imputation of any feeling of regard for Harry Wittingham ; but he took care not to show , to its full extent , all the pleasure that he felt . " I thought it strange ...
... hear Mary Clifford defend herself , and so warmly too , from the imputation of any feeling of regard for Harry Wittingham ; but he took care not to show , to its full extent , all the pleasure that he felt . " I thought it strange ...
Página 100
... hear reason ; then , when he sees no means of escape whatever , he will consent that others shall find one for him . You had better talk to his daughter , but enjoin her to secrecy . If I have an opportunity , I will sound Beauchamp ; I ...
... hear reason ; then , when he sees no means of escape whatever , he will consent that others shall find one for him . You had better talk to his daughter , but enjoin her to secrecy . If I have an opportunity , I will sound Beauchamp ; I ...
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Términos y frases comunes
answered Beauchamp asked baronet better Billy Botany Bay Buxton's Buxton's inn Captain Hayward Captain Moreton companion cottage cousin cried Sir John dare say dear doctor Doctor Miles Don Quixote door exclaimed eyes face father feel fellow fired four-and-twenty gamekeeper gazed gentleman give gone grave hand head heard heart Heaven Henry Wittingham horse hour instant Isabella kind knew lady Lamb laugh Lenham light look Mary Clifford matter means mind minutes Miss Clifford Miss Slingsby moor morning Ned Hay never Newfoundland dog passed paused perhaps person Pilkington poacher poaching poor replied Ned Hayward round seemed sexton side Sir John Slingsby smile soon sort speak Stephen Gimlet steps suddenly sure talk Tarning Tarningham tell things thought tion to-morrow told tone took trees trout turned uncle walked Wharton wish words young
Pasajes populares
Página 205 - Man's love is of man's life a thing apart, "Tis woman's whole existence; man may range The court, camp, church, the vessel, and the mart; Sword, gown, gain, glory, offer in exchange Pride, fame, ambition, to fill up his heart, And few there are whom these cannot estrange; Men have all these resources, we but one, To love again, and be again undone.
Página 121 - ... eyes of admiring thousands the works of the poet, or displayed the skill of the actor, has produced such deep tragedy as you. How often has the sight of the thin folded sheet, with its strange, crooked black hieroglyphics, overwhelmed the lightest and the gayest heart with heaviness and mourning ! how often changed the smile into the tear ! how often swept away the gay pageants of imagination, and memory, and hope, and left the past all darkness, and the future all despair ! But, on the contrary,...
Página 62 - No, hang me if I go to bed with such a morsel on my stomach." Then, putting it on the other side of the candle, and his glass to his eye, he read the contents. They did not seem to be palateable ; for the first sentence made him exclaim, " Pish! I know you my buck!" After this he read on again ; and, though he made no further exclamation, his brow became cloudy, and his eye anxious. When he had done, he threw it down, put his hands behind his back, and walked two or three times up and down the room,...