Lost and saved, Volum 2 |
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Lost and saved, Volum 2 Caroline Elizabeth S. Norton (hon. mrs. George.) Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1863 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
aunt Myra baby ball Beatrice Brooke Beatrice's beauty believe Caërlaverock's Captain Brooke carriage charming cheek cheerful child comfort dear door dreadful dream dress Eton eyes face family matters father feel Freiligrath gentleman girl gone Grey hair hand heard heart Helen Wollingham hope hour husband knew lace Lady Eudocia Lady Nesdale landlady laugh leave letter live London looked Marchioness of Updown Marchioness's Mariana married Maurice Lewellyn midshipman Milly Nesdale Milly's Miss Brooke Montagu Treherne morning morning dress mother Nesdale's never night night mail once Owen pale Parkes passed passion pause pity poor Pryce Perry Putney Queen Royal Navy seemed seen sigh sleep smile sorrow sort soul spoke stood Stratton Street sure sweet tell Tenby thing thought told took Treherne's uncles waiting walked watching wife window wish woman women young lady
Populære avsnitt
Side 65 - comfort and help the weak-hearted, and to raise up them that fall,"— and
Side 265 - Inasmuch as ye did it to the least of these, ye did it unto Me.
Side 280 - Beatrice Brooke was as beautiful a woman as could be seen or imagined; but she reached Stratton Street without adventure and without remark, beyond that passing glance which Moore and Byron have both commemorated in poetry as given to faces we sometimes meet " in the world's crowd," and whose recurring loveliness comes back to us whenever we dream of beauty!
Side 65 - Who art thou that judgest another? To his own master he standeth or
Side 8 - Such natures will not await the coming event; they cannot watch the subtle alchemy of brooding days, even though the chance of a golden hour lie there. They are for ever wrestling before dawn with the dark angel of
Side 278 - It is a dream of romancists that your heroine's beauty cannot be seen without attracting as much attention as a comet. If a woman be modestly dressed, simple in manner, and obviously going
Side 240 - really was breaking to her some new dreadful phase in her life, she passed to the wildest frenzy of reproach to him personally, for being the bearer of such
Side 106 - am of this mind; that both might and malice, deceit and treachery,
Side 257 - Mr. Grey listened with increasing severity and disapprobation. Her occasional tears did not touch him; her appealing looks, from time to time, when urging some
Side 241 - But before the hot afternoon had waned away, a little note recalled him: it said— " Forgive my violence—I want to ask you one