Mary Erskine: A Franconia StoryHarper & brothers, 1850 - 202 sider |
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Side 34
... dollars and my axe , -and this right arm . I am thinking of buying . a lot of land , about a mile beyond Kater's corner . If I will do it , and build a small house of one room there , will you come and be my wife ? It will have to be a ...
... dollars and my axe , -and this right arm . I am thinking of buying . a lot of land , about a mile beyond Kater's corner . If I will do it , and build a small house of one room there , will you come and be my wife ? It will have to be a ...
Side 43
... dollars of his own , and enough be- sides to buy a winter stock of provisions for his house . He had expected to have gone in debt for the sixty dollars , the whole price of the land being one hundred and sixty ; but to his great ...
... dollars of his own , and enough be- sides to buy a winter stock of provisions for his house . He had expected to have gone in debt for the sixty dollars , the whole price of the land being one hundred and sixty ; but to his great ...
Side 44
... dollars will get Besides there is more than fif- teen dollars , for there is the interest . " The money had been put out at interest in the village . 66 Well , " said Albert , " and I can make the rest of the furniture that we shall ...
... dollars will get Besides there is more than fif- teen dollars , for there is the interest . " The money had been put out at interest in the village . 66 Well , " said Albert , " and I can make the rest of the furniture that we shall ...
Side 52
... dollars a year , certainly . " " No , " said Mary Erskine . " I like this plan the best . We will pay as we go along . It will be a great deal better to have the three hundred dollars for something else than to pay old debts with . We ...
... dollars a year , certainly . " " No , " said Mary Erskine . " I like this plan the best . We will pay as we go along . It will be a great deal better to have the three hundred dollars for something else than to pay old debts with . We ...
Side 70
... day , when Albert came home from the village , he told Mary Erskine that he had an offer of a loan of two hundred dollars , from Mr. Keep . Mr. Keep was an elderly gentle- Mr. Keep . Mr. Gordon's request . man of the 70 MARY ERSKINE .
... day , when Albert came home from the village , he told Mary Erskine that he had an offer of a loan of two hundred dollars , from Mr. Keep . Mr. Keep was an elderly gentle- Mr. Keep . Mr. Gordon's request . man of the 70 MARY ERSKINE .
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
50 cents 66 Mary accordingly Albert Anne Sophia asked Mary Bell asked Mary Erskine baby barn baskets of chips Beechnut began Bell's Bella breakfast brook called cents chil climb corner cows desk dipper don't you forget door dren farm finished fire Franconia glad Gordon guardian half Calf hand happy horse hundred dollars JARED SPARKS Jemmy Judge of Probate Julius Cæsar Keep land learn to write letters Letters of Administration live LL.D looked Madame Guyon Mary Erskine's house morning mother Muslin neral night night lamp oven oxen pail paper path pause Phonny and Malleville Phonny's play pleasant pleasure Queen Bess ready replied road Sheep extra side skine sleep Sligo spider cake spring stoop strawberries thing Thomas thought told took trees village vols wagon walked window wished woods
Populære avsnitt
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Side 6 - ... to feed it, while in the latter case, nearly every one will just as certainly look for a stone. Thus the growing up in the right atmosphere, rather than the receiving of the right instruction, is the condition which it is most important to secure, in plans for forming the characters of children. It is in accordance with this philosophy that these stories, though written mainly with a view to their moral influence on the hearts and dispositions of the readers, contain very little formal exhortation...
Side 4 - Congress, in the year one thousand eight hundred and fifty-five, by HARPER & BROTHERS, In the Clerk's Office for the Southern District of New York.
Side 5 - The development of the moral sentiments in the human heart, in early life, — and everything in fact which relates to the formation of character, — is determined in a far greater degree by sympathy, and by the influence of example, than by formal precepts and didactic instruction.