Winter Evening Tales: Collected Among the Cottagers in the South of Scotland, Band 1Oliver & Boyd, 1821 - 340 Seiten |
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Seite 4
... kind , until the prospect of getting me advantageously engaged as a journeyman died somewhat away That it might not too abruptly be renewed , I proposed to my father to hold one of his ploughs , a task , to which I assured him , I was ...
... kind , until the prospect of getting me advantageously engaged as a journeyman died somewhat away That it might not too abruptly be renewed , I proposed to my father to hold one of his ploughs , a task , to which I assured him , I was ...
Seite 16
... her home . We went into her father's byre , and sat down on some clean hay to court . I said a great many kind things to her , not one of which was true , and always between hands endeavoured to prejudice her 16 WINTER EVENING TALES .
... her home . We went into her father's byre , and sat down on some clean hay to court . I said a great many kind things to her , not one of which was true , and always between hands endeavoured to prejudice her 16 WINTER EVENING TALES .
Seite 17
... kind of courting that I neither understood nor relished ; it was too systematic and ceremonious for me . However , I thought , that on getting her for my wife all that kind of flummery would be over ; and I persisted in my suit , till ...
... kind of courting that I neither understood nor relished ; it was too systematic and ceremonious for me . However , I thought , that on getting her for my wife all that kind of flummery would be over ; and I persisted in my suit , till ...
Seite 22
... kind of sneer : and our custom was to sit opposite one another , with averted eyes , and cut and snub one another all that we could , still pretending to be in good humour , yet all the while full of bitterness and gall . This state of ...
... kind of sneer : and our custom was to sit opposite one another , with averted eyes , and cut and snub one another all that we could , still pretending to be in good humour , yet all the while full of bitterness and gall . This state of ...
Seite 23
... kind of despondency in my charmer's looks that quite overcame me , and I resolved to dedicate my life to her . I never durst look forward to the future , or calculate with myself what were to be the consequences of this amour BASIL LEE .
... kind of despondency in my charmer's looks that quite overcame me , and I resolved to dedicate my life to her . I never durst look forward to the future , or calculate with myself what were to be the consequences of this amour BASIL LEE .
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acquainted Alice appeared asked astonishment auld beautiful better braes of Balquhidder canna Clifford cobbler Cochrane creature dear dear Mary delight devil dinna door dream dress Duncan Edinburgh eyes face fair father fear fell frae gaun gave Gemble gentleman Geordie girl Glendinning Halbert hand head hear heard heart Highland honour Inverness Jessy John Gray Kelso kind kiss knew lady lassie laugh length lived Loch Loch Venachar looked lying marriage Mary matter maun Middleholm mind Moffat morning never night obliged Odogherty once Oscar pack plaid poor round Sandy Welch Sassenach seen servants side soon stane stood story sure tell thee thing thou thought threw Tibby Stott told Tommy Potts took turned weel wife woman word ye hae ye're young
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 123 - A blank, my lord : She never told her love, But let concealment, like a worm i' the bud, Feed on her damask cheek : she pined in thought ; And, with a green and yellow melancholy, She sat like patience on a monument, Smiling at grief.
Seite 151 - In all her length far winding lay, With promontory, creek, and bay, And islands that, empurpled bright, Floated amid the livelier light, And mountains, that like giants stand, To sentinel enchanted land.
Seite 213 - Moreover the Lord saith, Because the daughters of Zion are haughty, and walk with stretched forth necks and wanton eyes, walking and mincing as they go, and making a tinkling with their feet...
Seite 99 - ... catastrophe. Mr. Bell was a gentleman of Annandale, in Dumfriesshire, in the south of Scotland, the proprietor of a considerable estate in that district, part of which he occupied himself. He lost his father when he was an infant, and his mother dying when he was about twenty years of age, left him the sole proprietor of the estate, besides a large sum of money at interest, for which he was indebted, in a great measure, to his mother's parsimony during his minority. His person was tall, comely,...
Seite 218 - ... righteousness of Christ to recommend him to the favor of God, or entitle him to eternal life. When a rebel is fully forgiven, he is by that very act restored to the favor of his prince. So, when a penitent, believing sinner is fully forgiven, his very forgiveness restores him to the favor of God, both in this life and that which is to come.
Seite 175 - But, indeed, I am not able to carry my goods further to-night." "Then you must leave them, or get a horse to carry them away." " Of all the sweet inflexible beings that, ever were made, you certainly are the chief. But I cannot blame you; your resolution is just and right. Well, well, since no better may be, I must leave them and go search for lodgings myself somewhere else, for, fatigued as I am, it is as much as my life is worth to endeavour carrying them further.
Seite 176 - But, oh Richard, I tremble to tell you ! We are all gone, for it is a living pack." " A living pack !" said Richard, staring at Alice, and letting his chops fall down. Richard had just lifted his flail over his head to begin threshing a sheaf; but when he heard of a living pack, he dropped one end of the hand-staff to the floor, and, leaning on the other, took such a look at Alice. He never took such a look at her in his life. " A living pack!" said Richard. "Why, the woman is mad, without all doubt.
Seite 179 - ... tempt some people to use stratagems. Now, if we open up this man's pack, he may pursue us for damages to any amount, but if I shoot it what amends can he get of me ? If there is any thing that should not be there, Lord, how I will pepper it ! And if it is lawful goods, he can only make me pay for the few that are damaged, which I will get at valuation ; so, if none of you will acquiesce, I will take all the blame upon myself, and ware a shot upon it.
Seite 181 - see what he has here. But I should not call him villain," said he again, softening his tone ; " for he is now gone to answer at that bar where no false witness, nor loquacious orator, can bias the justice of the sentence pronounced on him. He is now in the true world, and I am in the false one.
Seite 104 - M'Millan returned quietly to his chamber without awakening any of the family. His pains were gone, but his mind was shocked and exceedingly perturbed ; and, after deliberating until morning, he determined to say nothing of the matter, and to make no living creature acquainted with what he had seen ; thinking that suspicion would infallibly rest on him. Accordingly he kept his bed next morning until his friend brought him the tidings that a gentleman had been murdered at the back of the house during...