The unknown; or, The northern gallery, Band 11826 |
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Seite 25
... idea of attempting to render a book of amusement a vehicle for religious controversy ; we shall there- fore content ourselves , in this part of our narrative , with stating , as briefly as the subject will admit , such facts as are ne ...
... idea of attempting to render a book of amusement a vehicle for religious controversy ; we shall there- fore content ourselves , in this part of our narrative , with stating , as briefly as the subject will admit , such facts as are ne ...
Seite 43
... idea of his hav- ing for the last time beheld the author of his being ; the appearance of Eleonora recalled his powers into action ; he put into her hand the letter which he had on the preceding evening addressed to the Lady Thomasine ...
... idea of his hav- ing for the last time beheld the author of his being ; the appearance of Eleonora recalled his powers into action ; he put into her hand the letter which he had on the preceding evening addressed to the Lady Thomasine ...
Seite 50
... idea , her every wish ? The sin which Eleonora had committed was that of con- cealment : -And whence could have arisen the necessity of her practising an art of this nature ? It had sprung from that pas- sion to which every other ...
... idea , her every wish ? The sin which Eleonora had committed was that of con- cealment : -And whence could have arisen the necessity of her practising an art of this nature ? It had sprung from that pas- sion to which every other ...
Seite 52
... idea of Arcadian landscape : -at the foot of one of these hills , dug from its moss - covered side , was a cell , which had once been the abode of a solitary man , retired from the cares and vanities of the world , and who had now paid ...
... idea of Arcadian landscape : -at the foot of one of these hills , dug from its moss - covered side , was a cell , which had once been the abode of a solitary man , retired from the cares and vanities of the world , and who had now paid ...
Seite 54
... idea of her labouring under a temporary derange- ment of intellect ; but it passed hastily off ; and her actions were ever grave and consistent : her never - varying dress was a garb of the nature of those worn by pil- grims ; grims ...
... idea of her labouring under a temporary derange- ment of intellect ; but it passed hastily off ; and her actions were ever grave and consistent : her never - varying dress was a garb of the nature of those worn by pil- grims ; grims ...
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abode addressed alarm apartment appeared apprehension arms attend beheld believe Bishop bless breast burst cast her eyes Castle Gower cause chamber circumstance companion concealed countenance courser dear death domestics door drawbridge dreaded Egbert Eleo endeavoured entered fate father fears feelings felt Framlingham Castle gentle Gillian habitation hand happiness hastily heard heart Heaven her's hermit Agatha hermitage horse hour Hugh Latimer idea immediately inquired journey Lady Benigna Lady Blunt Lady Jane Grey Lady Magdalene Lady Thomasine LATHOM Latimer Latimer's lips Lord Henry ment mind morning mother myste mysterious acquaintance nature night nora Northern Gallery observed old Katherine Orilla parents passed placed possessed prehension prelate present promise proverb recollection reflection replied Eleonora retired returned scarcely servants Sir Eldred Sir Hildebrand sorrow sound spoke spot stood stranger suffer sunk tears thee Thomas Bilney thou tion trembling unknown uttered whilst wish wood Worcester
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 121 - O, how this spring of love resembleth The uncertain glory of an April day ; Which now shows all the beauty of the sun, And by and by a cloud takes all away ! Re-enter PANTHINO.
Seite 211 - But their way Lies through the perplexed paths of this drear wood, The nodding horror of whose shady brows Threats the forlorn and wandering passenger...
Seite 121 - Who see'st appall'd th' unreal scene, While Fancy lifts the veil between: Ah Fear ! Ah frantic Fear ! I see, I see thee near. I know thy hurried step, thy haggard eye ! Like thee I start, like thee disorder'd fly...
Seite 1 - I hold the world but as the world, Gratiano ; A stage where every man must play his part, And mine a sad one.
Seite xi - The cloud-capt towers, the gorgeous palaces, The solemn temples, the great globe itself, Yea, all which it inherits, shall dissolve; And, like this insubstantial pageant faded, Leave not a wreck behind.
Seite 205 - Queen were now in pursuit ; it was true, that the length of time which had elapsed since the death of the...
Seite 31 - In this parliament passed the famous act, as it was called, of the six articles; which was no sooner published, than it gave an universal alarm to all favourers of the Reformation* ; and, as the bishop of Worcester could not give his vote for the act, he thought it wrong to hold any office in a church, where such terms of communion were required. He therefore resigned his bishopric...
Seite 189 - ... summit of Monte Gargano, to fulfill a vow they had made to thee, Archangel Michael. When they saw there a certain man dressed in the Greek fashion, whose name was Melo, they marvelled at the exile's strange garb and at the unfamiliar windings of a turban on his bandaged head. As they gazed upon him they inquired who he was and whence he came. He replied that he was a Lombard by birth and a freeborn citizen of Bari, but had been banished his native soil by the ferocity of the Greeks. As the Gauls...