Fireside Studies, Band 1Chatto and Windus, 1876 |
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Seite 18
... mother sat weeping alone by it . I had my battledore in my hand , and fell a beating the coffin , and calling ' Papa ! ' for , I know not how , I had some slight idea that he was locked up there . My mother catched me in her arms ...
... mother sat weeping alone by it . I had my battledore in my hand , and fell a beating the coffin , and calling ' Papa ! ' for , I know not how , I had some slight idea that he was locked up there . My mother catched me in her arms ...
Seite 38
... mother is as follows ; - Barbadoes estate ( let with negroes ) Gazetteer office . £ 850 300 Gentleman - usher 100 ... mother's consent , and awaited it until she would come to him , by some process of reasoning which we confess ourselves ...
... mother is as follows ; - Barbadoes estate ( let with negroes ) Gazetteer office . £ 850 300 Gentleman - usher 100 ... mother's consent , and awaited it until she would come to him , by some process of reasoning which we confess ourselves ...
Seite 39
... mother's consent , and concealing the fact that they were married . He compli- ments his wife on her filial virtue in only consenting to come to his arms with her mother's blessing . It is very probable that Mrs. Steele's sudden ...
... mother's consent , and concealing the fact that they were married . He compli- ments his wife on her filial virtue in only consenting to come to his arms with her mother's blessing . It is very probable that Mrs. Steele's sudden ...
Seite 40
... mother - in - law's lifetime he only got from the Welsh estate what she chose to give him , and on this he and his wife started a style of living which would take nearly three thousand pounds a year now . His excuse was that it was ...
... mother - in - law's lifetime he only got from the Welsh estate what she chose to give him , and on this he and his wife started a style of living which would take nearly three thousand pounds a year now . His excuse was that it was ...
Seite 59
... mother's at Caermarthen . There seems to have been no quarrel , but Steele seems to have been most miserably poor for some reason he writes , " We had not , when you left us , an inch of candle or a pound of coal in the house , but we ...
... mother's at Caermarthen . There seems to have been no quarrel , but Steele seems to have been most miserably poor for some reason he writes , " We had not , when you left us , an inch of candle or a pound of coal in the house , but we ...
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Addison admirable afterwards Andrew Marvell Bartholomew Fair Ben Jonson better Bobadil borough Brainworm Budgell Burrell Cato certainly character Charles Charles II Church conscience court Cromwell Cuckfield death demyship Downright Drummond Duchess Duchess of Portsmouth Duke England English Erastian fact father friends gave gentle gentleman Giles Moore give hand Horsted Keynes husband John Coachman Jonson King Kitely Lady Steele Lancelot Addison Latin lived Lord Cutts Lord Macaulay married Marvell's Masque matter Milton mother nearly never Old Knowell once paper Parker parliament person play poem poet Pope pounds Prince probably quarrel Queen readers religion seems Sejanus servant Shakespeare shillings singular Sir Richard Steele Sir Roger speak Spectator splendid Steele's Sussex Swift tells things Tickell tion tolerable took verses Volpone Wellborn Whig wife Wimble Winestead woman write written wrote Young Knowell