Tales of the hallJohn Murray, 1820 |
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Side 16
... tell it now to me . ' " Stigma ! I know , -the things with yellow heads , " That shed the dust , and grow upon the threads ; " You call them wives and husbands , but you know " That is a joke - here , look , and I will show " All I ...
... tell it now to me . ' " Stigma ! I know , -the things with yellow heads , " That shed the dust , and grow upon the threads ; " You call them wives and husbands , but you know " That is a joke - here , look , and I will show " All I ...
Side 17
... tell ; " Our different tastes may different books require , — " Yours I may not peruse , and yet admire : " Do then explain'- Good Heaven ! ' said she , in haste , " How do I hate these lectures upon taste ! ' VOL . II . C " I lecture ...
... tell ; " Our different tastes may different books require , — " Yours I may not peruse , and yet admire : " Do then explain'- Good Heaven ! ' said she , in haste , " How do I hate these lectures upon taste ! ' VOL . II . C " I lecture ...
Side 19
... the times " I read in Pope and Milton , prose and rhymes ; They were our lessons , and , at ten years old , " I could repeat but now enough is told . 66 6 66 6 Sir , I can tell you I my c 2 BOOK IX , 19 THE PRECEPTOR HUSBAND .
... the times " I read in Pope and Milton , prose and rhymes ; They were our lessons , and , at ten years old , " I could repeat but now enough is told . 66 6 66 6 Sir , I can tell you I my c 2 BOOK IX , 19 THE PRECEPTOR HUSBAND .
Side 20
George Crabbe. 66 6 Sir , I can tell you I my mind applied " To all my studies , and was not denied " Praise for my progress Are you satisfied ? ' 66 6 Entirely , madam ! else were I possess'd " By a strong spirit who could never rest ...
George Crabbe. 66 6 Sir , I can tell you I my mind applied " To all my studies , and was not denied " Praise for my progress Are you satisfied ? ' 66 6 Entirely , madam ! else were I possess'd " By a strong spirit who could never rest ...
Side 30
... who know not the delight or pain , " The best description would be lent in vain ; " And to the grieving , who will no more find " The bower of bliss , to paint it were unkind ; " " I pass it by , to tell that 30 BOOK X. TALES OF THE HALL .
... who know not the delight or pain , " The best description would be lent in vain ; " And to the grieving , who will no more find " The bower of bliss , to paint it were unkind ; " " I pass it by , to tell that 30 BOOK X. TALES OF THE HALL .
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afraid answer'd appear'd art thou ask'd Augusta beauty behold bless'd bliss call'd Cecilia charm cold comfort cried curtesy danger dare dear delight disdain ease express'd fair fancied Fanny fate father favourite fear fear'd feel felt fill'd Finch fix'd foes fond gave gentle GEORGE CRABBE girl grew grief grieved happy happy day hear heart Henry hope hopes and fears judge kind knew lady live LL.B look look'd lover maid marriage mind misery Morden mother neighbours never nymph o'er obey'd once pain pair pass'd passion peace pity pleasure poison'd poor possess'd praise pray'd pride Rector resign'd seem'd shame sigh Sir Owen smile sought soul speak spirit spleen spoke strong sure sweet tale talk'd taste tell tender thee thing thou thought told took truth Twas vex'd weak wife wish wish'd words youth
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Side 186 - Fanny, dear girl! has in my spouse and me " Friends of a kind we wish our friends to be, " None of the poorest nay, sir, no reply, " You shall not need and we are born to die: " And one yet crawls on earth, of whom, I say, " That what he has he cannot take away; " Her mother's father, one who has a store " Of this world's good, and always looks for more; " But, next his money, loves the girl at heart, " And she will have it when they come to part.
Side 195 - Of all attention to another paid ; Yet powerless she her husband to amuse, Lives but t' entreat, implore, resent, accuse ; Jealous and tender, conscious of defects, She merits little, and yet much expects...
Side 51 - Time after time the maid went out and in, " Ere love was yet beginning to begin ; " The first awakening proof, the early doubt, " Rose from observing she went in and out.
Side 194 - With all its dark intensity of shade ; Where the rough wind alone was heard to move, In this, the pause of nature and of love, When now the young are rear'd, and when the old, Lost to the tie, grow negligent and cold — Far to the left he saw the huts of men, Half hid in mist that hung upon the fen ; Before him swallows, gathering for the sea, Took their short nights, and twitter'd on the lea ; And near the bean-sheaf stood, the harvest done, And slowly blacken'd in the sickly sun...
Side 96 - And on the ocean slept th' unanchor'd fleet ; When from our garden, as we look'd above, There was no cloud, and nothing seem'd to move ; Then was my friend in ecstasies — she cried, " There is, I feel there is, a world beside ! " Martha, dear Martha ! we shall hear not then " Of hearts distress'd by good or evil men, " But all will constant, tender, faithful be — " So had I been, and so had one with me ; " But in this world the fondest and the best " Are the most tried, most troubled, and distress'd...
Side 193 - That evening all in fond discourse was spent, When the sad lover to his chamber went, To think on what had past, to grieve and to repent : Early he rose, and look'd with many a sigh On the red light that fill'd the eastern sky ; Oft had he stood before, alert and gay, To hail the glories of the new-born day : But now dejected, languid, listless, low, He saw the wind upon the water blow, And the cold stream curl'd onward as the gale From the pine-hill blew harshly down the dale ; On the right side...
Side 44 - I rode or walked as I was wont before. But now the bounding spirit was no more; A moderate pace would now my body heat; A walk of moderate length distress my feet. I showed my stranger guest those hills sublime, But said, "The view is poor; we need not climb.
Side 43 - Six years had passed, and forty ere the six, When Time began to play his usual tricks : The locks once comely in a virgin's sight, Locks of pure brown, displayed the encroaching white ; The blood, once fervid, now to cool began, And Time's strong pressure to subdue the man. I rode or walked as I was wont before, But now the bounding spirit was no more ; A moderate pace would now my body heat, A walk of moderate length distress my feet. I...
Side 65 - Secrets with girls, like loaded guns with boys, " Are never valued till they make a noise ; " To show how trusted, they their power display; " To show how worthy, they the trust betray; " Like pence in children's pockets secrets lie " In female bosoms— they must burn or fly.