| Fanny Burney - 1842 - 494 Seiten
...after doing whatever I can to forward my dress for the next morning, I go to bed — and to sleep, too, believe me : the early rising, and a long day's attention...stream after a little meandering about and about it. I think now yon will be able to see and to follow me pretty closely. With regard to those summonses... | |
| William Tait, Christian Isobel Johnstone - 1842 - 834 Seiten
...after doing whatever I can to forward my dress for the next morning, I go to bed — and to sleep too, believe me : the early rising, and a long day's attention...is its usual destination, and its intended course. On public or state days, the etiquette was, and probably still is, that some of the women of the bed-chamber... | |
| Fanny Burney - 1842 - 490 Seiten
...after doing whatever I can to forward my dress for the next morning, I go to bed — and to sleep, too, believe me : the early rising, and a long day's attention...moment I have put out my candle and laid down my head. I think now you will be able to see and to follow me pretty closely. With regard to those summonses... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1842 - 558 Seiten
...after doing whatever I can to forward my dress for the next morning, I go to bed — and to sleep, too, believe me: the early rising, and a long day's attention...moment I have put out my candle and laid down my head. — vol. iii. pp. 27-31. These are the materials out of which Miss Burney contrived to make herself... | |
| 1842 - 610 Seiten
...after doing whatever I can to forward my dress for the next morning, I go to bed — and to sleep, too, believe me : the early rising, and a long day's attention...moment I have put out my candle and laid down my head. * * With regard to those summonses I speak of, I will now explain myself. My summons, upon all regular... | |
| 1842 - 590 Seiten
...to bed — and to sleep, too, believe me: the early rising and a long day's attention to new affaiis and occupations, cause a fatigue so bodily that nothing...moment I have put out my candle and laid down my head.' — vol. iii. pp. 27-31. These are the materials out of which Miss Burney contrived to make herself... | |
| 1842 - 788 Seiten
...me : the early rising, and a long day's attention to new affairs and occupations, cause a fatigue to bodily that nothing mental stands against it, and...moment I have put out my candle and laid down my head.' — vol. iii. pp. 27-31. These are the materials out of which Miss Burney contrived to make herself... | |
| Fanny Burney - 1843 - 494 Seiten
...after doing whatever I can to forward my dress for the next morning, I go to bed— and to sleep, too, believe me: the early rising, and a long day's attention...moment I have put out my candle and laid down my head. I think now you will be able to see and to follow me pretty closely. With regard to those summonses... | |
| Anne Katharine Curteis Elwood - 1843 - 368 Seiten
...Queen, when she herself afterwards retired to bed — " and to sleep, too, believe me," says she ; " the early rising, and a long day's attention to new...I have put out my candle, and laid down my head." Miss Burney appears to have been not very well fitted for her office. She had been brought up too independently... | |
| 1851 - 1220 Seiten
...the Queen, when she herself afterwards retired to bed, "and to sleep, too, believe me," she says. " The early rising and a long day's attention to new...moment I have put out my candle and laid down my head." She made an excursion with the royal family to Oxford, where she was almost starved and fatigued to... | |
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