The Gentleman's Magazine, Volumen291Bradbury, Evans, 1901 |
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Página 6
... write about it : that was not his idea of a holiday , but it would give him someone else to be angry with . He was tired of being angry with insensate publishers . He would seek other objects for his wrath - the prosperous little ...
... write about it : that was not his idea of a holiday , but it would give him someone else to be angry with . He was tired of being angry with insensate publishers . He would seek other objects for his wrath - the prosperous little ...
Página 13
... write me a few lines to enclose with it . You can do that here . " Protest was useless . Meldrum sat down at a writing - table . The letter only took him five minutes . When it was finished , he received his dismissal . All this had ...
... write me a few lines to enclose with it . You can do that here . " Protest was useless . Meldrum sat down at a writing - table . The letter only took him five minutes . When it was finished , he received his dismissal . All this had ...
Página 15
... write nothing to him , until you have my permission to do so . " " So be it . " " I am going home to - morrow , and will explain the mistake to Mr. Verrall . That will be better than writing . " " Mr. Verrall has asked me to see him ...
... write nothing to him , until you have my permission to do so . " " So be it . " " I am going home to - morrow , and will explain the mistake to Mr. Verrall . That will be better than writing . " " Mr. Verrall has asked me to see him ...
Página 17
A SUSSEX PEPYS . WILLIAM COWPER , who was afterwards Lord Chancellor , W writing to his wife in 1690 from the comparatively civilised neighbourhood of Kingston - on - Thames , excused himself for not having written from Horsham - where ...
A SUSSEX PEPYS . WILLIAM COWPER , who was afterwards Lord Chancellor , W writing to his wife in 1690 from the comparatively civilised neighbourhood of Kingston - on - Thames , excused himself for not having written from Horsham - where ...
Página 21
... writes : " This day I went to Mr. Porter's to inform him that the livery lace was not come , when I think Mrs. Porter treated me with as much imperious and scornful usage as if she had been , what I think she is , more of a Turk and ...
... writes : " This day I went to Mr. Porter's to inform him that the livery lace was not come , when I think Mrs. Porter treated me with as much imperious and scornful usage as if she had been , what I think she is , more of a Turk and ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Abbot Amos appear Bargrave Basque Béarn beautiful birds Bishop Bolingbroke Calamy called Captain CCXCI century Charlotte Square church death Dorothea eggs ELDERLY LADY England English eyes father favour feet figghiu France French Fuero Galdós gentleman give Grant Allen Guizot habits hand heart heat Hippocleides Houzeau interest island Jane Jekyll John Verrall Joseph Joseph Jekyll King Larkyns Larry Leipoa ocellata letter live London looked Lord Lord Palmerston Madame married matter megapods Meldrum Metternich Minister modern monks mother mound mound-building Navarre nest never night Nightjar Nonconformist once party passed perhaps play political Pompeii present Prince round seemed seen side sleep stage Talleyrand tell things thought took town Veal Verrall Whigs whip-poor-will wife words write Wyatt YOUNG GENT YOUNG LADY
Pasajes populares
Página 300 - else the tale will not be conceived. Now shall you have three ladies walk to gather flowers, and then we must believe the stage to be a garden. By-and-by we hear news of a shipwreck in the same place, then
Página 74 - Sink the sweet scenes of childhood, that mine eyes I never shut amid the sunny blaze, But straight with all their tints thy waters rise ; Thy crossing plank, thy margin's willowy maze And bedded sand that, veined with various dyes, Gleamed thro' thy bright transparence to the gaze ! Visions of childhood ! Oft have ye beguiled Lone
Página 421 - might not only be the most patient of butts and of listeners ; might not only always be ready in fine weather for bowls and in rainy weather for shovel-board, but might also save the expense of a gardener or of a groom. Sometimes the reverend man nailed up the apricots, and sometimes he curried the coach-horses.
Página 597 - I glory in the name of Briton, and the particular happiness of my life will ever consist in promoting the welfare of a people whose loyalty and -warm affection to me I consider the greatest and most permanent security of my throne.
Página 16 - Nous serons, par nos lois, les juges des ouvrages ; Par nos lois, prose et vers, tout nous sera soumis : Nul n'aura de l'esprit, hors nous et nos amis. Nous chercherons partout à trouver à redire, Et ne verrons que nous qui sachent bien écrire.
Página 324 - thinks of Launce's nameless sister, who is " as white as a lily and as small as a wand," surely the very picture of sweet English maidenhood ? Beaumont and Fletcher are never quoted, yet I could draw thence passages of tenderness and beauty unrivalled except in Shakespeare. Think, for instance, of the girl who, dressed as a page, has followed her lover to the
Página 565 - I am surprised to see you, you have been so long a stranger ; ' but told her she was glad to see her, and offered to salute her, which Mrs. Veal complied with, till their lips almost touched, and then Mrs. Veal drew her hand across her own eyes, and said,
Página 573 - and I am as well satisfied as I am of the best grounded matter of fact. And why we should dispute matter of fact because we cannot solve things of which we can have no certain or demonstrative notions, seems strange to me ; Mrs. Bargrave's authority and sincerity alone would have been undoubted in any other case.