| Samuel Sullivan Cox - 1852 - 476 páginas
...fall of a consecrated wafer, from the hand of one who doubted the real presence ! " Can such things be, and overcome us like a summer cloud, without our special wonder." I had the audacity, lawyerfashion, to cross-examine one of the mouks as to the identity of the relics.... | |
| Alfred Bunn - 1853 - 348 páginas
...newly faced each division, and they formed two very respectable sides of the street! " Can such things be, And overcome us like a summer cloud Without our special wonder ?" Certainly not; but wondering does not alter the business. Only imagine the bare possibility of going... | |
| 1853 - 632 páginas
...was he actually bewitched by a young gentleman coeval with King Charles the Witty ? " Can such things be, And overcome us like a summer cloud, Without our special wonder ?" Unable to solve the problem, the schoolmaster went to bed. The following day he had promised himself... | |
| Jacob Dewees - 1854 - 248 páginas
[ Lo sentimos, pero el contenido de esta página es de acceso restringido. ] | |
| Epes Sargent - 1855 - 348 páginas
...others, and too little to himself. EXERCISE XI. Inflection. — See pages 62, 63. 1. Can such things be, And overcome us, like a summer cloud, Without our special wonder' ? 2. Would it not employ a beau prettily enough, if, instead of continually playing with his snuff-box,... | |
| Emma Dorothy Eliza Nevitte Southworth - 1855 - 636 páginas
...prayed, to b« able to give her sorrowing brother peace. CHAPTER XLI. DREAMS AND VISIONS "Can such things be, And overcome us like a summer cloud, Without our special wonder?" — Shakspcarc. WINTER waned. Mrs. Waugh had attended the Commodore , to the South, for the benefit... | |
| William Maginn - 1856 - 372 páginas
...suddenly breaks up the assembly by the following confession of his horrors : — " Can such things be, And overcome us like a summer cloud, Without our special wonder ? You make mo Even to the disposition that I am, When now I think you can behold such sights And keep... | |
| Seba Smith, Elizabeth Oakes Prince Smith - 1856 - 592 páginas
...on the visit he has had, the troubled usurper inquires, as if thinking aloud : '• Can such things be. And overcome us like a Summer'« cloud, Without our special wonder." From the witches, in the famous scene of the cauldron, modern literature has plucked the rattling couplet... | |
| William Maginn - 1856 - 400 páginas
...suddenly breaks up the assembly by the following confession of his horrors : — " Can such things be, And overcome us like a summer cloud, Without our special wonder * You make me Even to the disposition that I am, When now I think you can behold such sights And keep... | |
| 1857 - 626 páginas
...Moir — himself a poet — expressly speaks with contempt. Well may we exclaim, • ' Can such things be, And overcome us, like a summer cloud, Without our special wonder 1 " As we find ourselves "racy of the soil," we shall see what Mr. Moir has to say on a subject which... | |
| |