The New Monthly Belle Assemblée, Band 27Joseph Rogerson, 1847 |
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... , 83 Tryst , the , 198 Twilight and its Angels , 114 Voices from Nature , 218 , 265 , 361 We will be happy , 71 Wherein is Happiness ? 331 White Butterfly , the , 198 Cooper Moy vi INDEX TO THE TWENTY - SEVENTH VOLUME .
... , 83 Tryst , the , 198 Twilight and its Angels , 114 Voices from Nature , 218 , 265 , 361 We will be happy , 71 Wherein is Happiness ? 331 White Butterfly , the , 198 Cooper Moy vi INDEX TO THE TWENTY - SEVENTH VOLUME .
Seite 5
... happy a termination . Of course , after a time , Fanny suffered herself to be duly wooed and won ; feeling grateful for the many proofs she had received of her lover's perfectly disinterested affection . But she could never be brought ...
... happy a termination . Of course , after a time , Fanny suffered herself to be duly wooed and won ; feeling grateful for the many proofs she had received of her lover's perfectly disinterested affection . But she could never be brought ...
Seite 6
... happy face ; Such a glow of life's young gladness , Such sweet ignorance of sadness ; Yet with shadows lying near Its surface , earthly sigh and tear , Waiting only time's dark wand To wake them from their fragile bond , And bid her ...
... happy face ; Such a glow of life's young gladness , Such sweet ignorance of sadness ; Yet with shadows lying near Its surface , earthly sigh and tear , Waiting only time's dark wand To wake them from their fragile bond , And bid her ...
Seite 12
... happy to spare his English ears any more politics . " Something like a sneer wreathed the hand- some lips of the officer as he accompanied the young girl to the gardens . " I shall never en- dure the sight of that frigid girl , " he ...
... happy to spare his English ears any more politics . " Something like a sneer wreathed the hand- some lips of the officer as he accompanied the young girl to the gardens . " I shall never en- dure the sight of that frigid girl , " he ...
Seite 23
... happy ; they are as it were the breathings of the purer portion of human nature , the whisperings of an immortal soul , the aspira- tions of the spirit half freed from the world and its bonds . But , alas ! such feelings are but as ...
... happy ; they are as it were the breathings of the purer portion of human nature , the whisperings of an immortal soul , the aspira- tions of the spirit half freed from the world and its bonds . But , alas ! such feelings are but as ...
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Batley beautiful better black lace breath bright brother brow capotes chapeaux charming cheek chemisette child colour corsage crape dark daughter dear deep delight dream dress exclaimed eyes face fair fancy Fanny father fear feel felt flowers Frank Hardie gaze gentle girl Grace Aguilar hand happy Harriet heard heart Helen Faucit hope hour husband Jenny Lind kind lace lady laugh Laura light lips look Lucy M'Dermott mantelet marriage Melinda mind Miss morning mother muslin never night o'er once Osbaldistone pale passed passementerie peignoir Percy poor racter redingote replied returned ribbon robe rose round scene seemed Singleton Sir Stephen sister sleeves smile sorrow soul spirit stood sweet taffeta tears tell thee thing thou thought tion tone trimmed Valenciennes lace voice Wansford wife window Winterfield wish woman words young Zeno Zenobia
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 163 - The human sorrow and smart ! And yet it never was in my soul To play so ill a part : But evil is wrought by want of Thought, As well as want of Heart...
Seite 318 - Though shut so close thy laughing eyes, Thy rosy lips still wear a smile, And move, and breathe delicious sighs ! — Ah, now soft blushes tinge her cheeks, And mantle o'er her neck of snow. Ah, now she murmurs, now she speaks What most I wish — and fear to know. She starts, she trembles, and she weeps ! Her fair hands folded on her breast. — And now, how like a saint she sleeps ! A seraph in the realms of rest ! Sleep on secure ! Above control, Thy thoughts belong to Heaven and thee ' And may...
Seite 311 - The Iliad for war; the Odyssey for wandering ; but where is the great domestic epic ? Yet it is but commonplace to say, that passions may rage round a tea-table, which would not have misbecome men dashing at one another in war chariots ; and evolutions of patience and temper are performed at the fireside, worthy to be compared with the Retreat of the Ten Thousand.
Seite 180 - Towbuith-Whigs, who loved nothing but extempore evangelical sermons, and would have considered it sufficient to bring the house down about their ears if the precentor had ceased, for one verse, the old hillside fashion of reciting the lines of the psalm before singing them.
Seite 311 - For a hundred men whose appetite for work can bo driven on by vanity, avarice, ambition, or a mistaken notion of advancing their families, there is about one who is desirous of expanding his own nature, and the nature of others in all directions, of cultivating many pursuits, of bringing himself...
Seite 135 - There, on a slope of orchard, Francis laid A damask napkin wrought with horse and hound, Brought out a dusky loaf that smelt of home, And, half-cut-down, a pasty costly-made, Where quail and pigeon, lark and leveret lay, Like fossils of the rock, with golden yolks Imbedded and injellied...
Seite 178 - ... the housemaid slept under the kitchen dresser ; and the one man-servant was turned at night out of the house. Had our friend chanced to get amongst trades-people, he might have found Mr Kerr, the eminent goldsmith in the Parliament Square, stowing his menage into a couple of small rooms above his boothlike shop, plastered against the wall of St Giles's Church ; the nursery and kitchen, however, being placed in a cellar under the level of the street, where the children are said to have rotted...
Seite 180 - Kirk had a sort of dignified aristocratic character, approaching somewhat to prelacy, and was frequented only by sound church-and-state men, who did not care so much for the sermon, as for the gratification of sitting in the same place with his majesty's Lords of Council and Session, and the magistrates of Edinburgh, and who desired to be thought men of sufficient liberality and taste to appreciate the prelections of Blair. The Old...
Seite 354 - ... fashion, yet I perceive you gather only the white ones ; now if you will accept my aid in the assortment of your posy, I shall enliven it with the blushing flower. See, too, how much hardier these are than those pale, sickly buds." Lady Somerton was startled by the first words which fell upon her ear, and the pale roses trembled in her grasp; but ere Sir Pierre Brandon's speech was concluded, she recovered, by an effort of the will, at least the semblance of composure. She could not but return...
Seite 311 - ... and evolutions of patience and temper are performed at the fireside, worthy to be compared with the Retreat of the Ten Thousand. Men have worshipped some fantastic being for living alone in a wilderness ; but social martyrdoms place no saints upon the calendar.