Longleat, by Elleray Lake, Volum 3 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
agony answered asked bairn beautiful beside bless breast Calton cambric Cameron canna captain Charley child Clara clasped Countess darling Davenant dead dear death Dick Burns door Dowager dread Earl Earl's Edward Elspie Elspie's Evans eyes face Fcap fear felt forgive frae gave gaze Glen Ross gone hair hand Harcourt head hear heard heart Helena Hendon honor hour I'm lyin iver kissed knew Lady Cranford laid Laird lassie Leddy lips Longleat Longleat woods looked Lord Cranford Lord Raglan mair Margaret maun Miss Seymour morning mother nane never night once passed pity Richard Burns Robert round Ruthven Castle seemed seen servant silent Simcoe smile sobbed sorrow soul stood suddenly sugh tears tell tender thee thought told took turned voice waves whispered wife window words Wull ye
Populære avsnitt
Side 80 - Let their table become a snare before them : and that which should have been for their welfare, let it become a trap.
Side 284 - The Origin and History of the English Language, and of the early literature it embodies. By the Hon. George P. Marsh, US Minister at Turin, Author of " Lectures on the English Language.
Side 283 - To all (both men and women) who have neglected to read and study their native literature we would certainly suggest the volume before us as a fitting introduction.
Side 283 - The Silent Hour: Essays, Original and Selected. By the Author of "The Gentle Life.
Side 281 - Round Table. With Biographical Introduction. The Religio Medici, Hydriotaphia, and the Letter to a Friend. By Sir THOMAS BROWNE, Knt. Ballad Poetry of the Affections. By ROBERT BUCHANAN. Coleridge's Christabel, and other Imaginative Poems. With Preface by ALGERNON C. SWINBURNE. Lord Chesterfield's Letters, Sentences and Maxims.
Side 284 - Containing as many as 74,000 references, under subjects, so as to ensure immediate reference to the books on the subject required, each giving title, price, publisher, and date. Two valuable Appendices are also...
Side 262 - Oh ! who would bear life's stormy doom, Did not Thy wing of love Come, brightly wafting through the gloom Our peace-branch from above!
Side 284 - The volumes before us show a vast amount of diligence ; but with Webster it is diligence in combination with fancifulness, — with Worcester in combination with good sense and judgment. Worcester's...
Side 287 - Plutarch's Lives. An entirely new Library Edition, carefully revised and corrected, with some Original Translations by the Editor. Edited by AH Clough, Esq. sometime Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford, and late Professor of English Language and Literature at University College. 5 vols. 8vo. cloth. 21. 10s. " Mr. dough's work is worthy of all praise, and we hope that it will tend to revive the study of Plutarch.
Side 281 - St. Louis, King of France. The Essays of Abraham Cowley, including all his Prose Works. Abdallah ; or the Four Leaves. By EDOUARD LABOULLAYE.