Mary Erskine: A Franconia StoryHarper & brothers, 1850 - 202 sider |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-5 av 17
Side 28
... leaving Malleville and Phonny to walk the rest of the way to Mary Erskine's . Besides their ride , they lost the re- mainder of the story of Sligo , if that can be said to be lost which never existed . For at the time when Beechnut ...
... leaving Malleville and Phonny to walk the rest of the way to Mary Erskine's . Besides their ride , they lost the re- mainder of the story of Sligo , if that can be said to be lost which never existed . For at the time when Beechnut ...
Side 67
... leave , after her call was ended , she asked Mary Erskine to come to the village and see her as soon as she could . " I meant to have called upon you long before this , " said she , " but I have been so busy , and we have had so much ...
... leave , after her call was ended , she asked Mary Erskine to come to the village and see her as soon as she could . " I meant to have called upon you long before this , " said she , " but I have been so busy , and we have had so much ...
Side 85
... leaving Mary Erskine alone with her chil- dren . As soon as her friends had gone , Mary Er- skine took the children and sat down in a rock- ing - chair , before the fire , holding them both in Mary Erskine alone with her children . her ...
... leaving Mary Erskine alone with her chil- dren . As soon as her friends had gone , Mary Er- skine took the children and sat down in a rock- ing - chair , before the fire , holding them both in Mary Erskine alone with her children . her ...
Side 90
... leave the room in deeper darkness than ever . The little night lamp , whose feeble beam had been for the moment entirely overpowered , would then gradually come out to view again , to dif- fuse once more its faint illumination , until ...
... leave the room in deeper darkness than ever . The little night lamp , whose feeble beam had been for the moment entirely overpowered , would then gradually come out to view again , to dif- fuse once more its faint illumination , until ...
Side 93
... leaving a wife and children , and a farm , and also stock , and furniture , and other such movable property , if he made no will , the wife was to have a part of the property , and the rest must be saved for the children , in order to ...
... leaving a wife and children , and a farm , and also stock , and furniture , and other such movable property , if he made no will , the wife was to have a part of the property , and the rest must be saved for the children , in order to ...
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
50 cents 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 looked Madame Guyon Mary Er 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
Side 203 - Lives of the Queens of Scotland, and English Princesses connected with the Regal Succession of Great Britain.
Side 203 - Muslin, $6 00. History of the United States, continued : From the Adoption of the Federal Constitution to the End of the Sixteenth Congress. By RICHARD HILDRETH, Esq. 3 vols. 8vo, Muslin, $6 00 ; Sheep, $6 75 ; half Calf. $7 50.
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.