The History of Clarissa Harlowe: In a Series of Letters, Volum 6J. Carpenter and William Miller, 1811 |
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Side 4
... Madam , do you design to go when you get out of this house ? I will throw myself into the first open house I can find ; and beg protection till I can get a coach , or a lodging in some honest family . What will you do for clothes , Madam ...
... Madam , do you design to go when you get out of this house ? I will throw myself into the first open house I can find ; and beg protection till I can get a coach , or a lodging in some honest family . What will you do for clothes , Madam ...
Side 5
... Madam , your's is a hard lot . I pity you at my heart ! Thank you , Dorcas ! -I am unhappy , that I did not think before , that I might have confided in thy pity , and in thy sex ! I pitied you , Madam , often and often : but you were ...
... Madam , your's is a hard lot . I pity you at my heart ! Thank you , Dorcas ! -I am unhappy , that I did not think before , that I might have confided in thy pity , and in thy sex ! I pitied you , Madam , often and often : but you were ...
Side 9
... Madam , to be a very good lady ; and here , ' in this neighbourhood , at a house of no high repute , is an innocent lady of rank and fortune , beautiful as a May morning , and youthful as a rose - bud , and full as ' sweet and lovely ...
... Madam , to be a very good lady ; and here , ' in this neighbourhood , at a house of no high repute , is an innocent lady of rank and fortune , beautiful as a May morning , and youthful as a rose - bud , and full as ' sweet and lovely ...
Side 24
... Madam ; with an air of satisfied assurance . She took it , and cast her eye over it , in such a careless way , as made it evident , that she had read it before : and then unthankfully tossed it into the window - seat before her . I ...
... Madam ; with an air of satisfied assurance . She took it , and cast her eye over it , in such a careless way , as made it evident , that she had read it before : and then unthankfully tossed it into the window - seat before her . I ...
Side 25
... Madam , who has feigned herself sick , on pur . pose to avoid seeing the man who adored her , should not— I know what thou wouldst say , interrupted she - Twenty and twenty low things , that my soul would have been above being guilty of ...
... Madam , who has feigned herself sick , on pur . pose to avoid seeing the man who adored her , should not— I know what thou wouldst say , interrupted she - Twenty and twenty low things , that my soul would have been above being guilty of ...
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The History of Clarissa Harlowe: In a Series of Letters, Volum 6 Samuel Richardson Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1792 |
The History of Clarissa Harlowe, in a Series of Letters, Volum 6 Samuel Richardson Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1792 |
The History of Clarissa Harlowe: In a Series of Letters, Volum 6 Samuel Richardson Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1792 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
answer believe Belton canonical hour Captain Tomlinson charming cousin cursed dear dearest creature devil Dorcas doubt earnest endeavour excuse eyes father favour fellow forgive give Hampstead hand happy Harlowe's heard heart her's Hickman honour hope Jack JOHN BELFORD July 18 July 21 June 28 justice knew Lady Betty Lady Sarah lady's laudanum letter libertine lodgings look Lord Lovel Mabell Madam marry messenger mind MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE Miss Harlowe morning mother never niece night obliged occasion once person phaëton Polly poor present pretended Lady pretty promise racter ready retrograde motion Sally Sally Martin servant Sinclair Solmes soul stept suffered suppose sure tell thee thing thou hast thou wilt thought Thursday told uncle unhappy vile villain Wedn wicked will-am wish woman women word wretch write young lady your's
Populære avsnitt
Side 423 - For I know that thou wilt bring me to death, and to the house appointed for all living.
Side 415 - Oh that I were as in months past, as in the days when God preserved me; When his candle shined upon my head, and when by his light I walked through darkness...
Side 416 - As I was in the days of my youth, when the secret of God was upon my tabernacle; When the Almighty was yet with me, when my children were about me; When I washed my steps with butter, and the rock poured me out rivers of oil...
Side 303 - A horrid hole of a house, in an alley they call a court; stairs wretchedly narrow, even to the first-floor rooms : and into a den they led me, with broken walls, which had been papered, as I saw by a multitude of tacks, and some torn bits held on by the rusty heads. The floor indeed was clean, but the ceiling was smoked with...