All for the best, a story of quiet life, Band 3Hurst and Blackett, 1861 |
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Seite 5
... given in such a way that you are expected to receive it as sympathy , is hardest to bear . No ! Miss Nunly ; for a little while longer you and I will be content to be strangers to each other's inmost self , bravely laying by in each ...
... given in such a way that you are expected to receive it as sympathy , is hardest to bear . No ! Miss Nunly ; for a little while longer you and I will be content to be strangers to each other's inmost self , bravely laying by in each ...
Seite 25
... given her sympathy if they dared . Home again , to gather up the precious relics of her departed life ; to lay away the flower whose rosy colour was to have been the herald of his return the glove she had just been mending ― - for him ...
... given her sympathy if they dared . Home again , to gather up the precious relics of her departed life ; to lay away the flower whose rosy colour was to have been the herald of his return the glove she had just been mending ― - for him ...
Seite 27
... given her the night before he went away ; and of which not a petal had curled or a leaf withered , because of that dew of friendship which rested always so lovingly upon them . At first sight of them , there came over her a bright flush ...
... given her the night before he went away ; and of which not a petal had curled or a leaf withered , because of that dew of friendship which rested always so lovingly upon them . At first sight of them , there came over her a bright flush ...
Seite 33
... given to Maud ; two other beads for the rosary of memory . But she never knew , neither did any one else , how and when that flower was plucked , nor how very gently upon its blue loveliness the thought of her had been laid . Like many ...
... given to Maud ; two other beads for the rosary of memory . But she never knew , neither did any one else , how and when that flower was plucked , nor how very gently upon its blue loveliness the thought of her had been laid . Like many ...
Seite 54
... given a bite nor a sup to anybody in this parish as I knows on , ' - an ' she hasn't neither , Mrs. Brant , for she's as big a screw as you ever set eyes on to be after takin ' the shine out of her as has allus been t ' pride an ...
... given a bite nor a sup to anybody in this parish as I knows on , ' - an ' she hasn't neither , Mrs. Brant , for she's as big a screw as you ever set eyes on to be after takin ' the shine out of her as has allus been t ' pride an ...
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adventure afore ain't Atkinson Author beautiful BLACKETT'S NEW PUBLICATIONS BLACKETT'S STANDARD LIBRARY bless Braeton Brant bright CHARLES JOHN ANDERSSON church coloured comfort crimson dear death Downshire hills Duke eyes face feel FENTON AYLMER flowers folks Fredrika Bremer fresh Gazette goin gone grey grief hand Harcourt heart heerd hope HURST AND BLACKETT'S Illustrations interesting JOHN HALIFAX JULIA KAVANAGH kind LAKE NGAMI leaves light Lingold Wood look ma'am Marbrook MARGARET MAITLAND married Maud's memory Miss Freer Miss Gabbatis Miss Maud Miss Nunly morning Mossingay narrative never night noble once past peace Philip pleasant Polly poor pray Prince Consort quiet rest round Sam Slick Scarbro shadow Siberia Slick sorrow sort Stephen Roden story sunlight sunshine sure sweet tell things thought took vols volume walk weary window words
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 219 - Enough that blessings undeserved Have marked my erring track ; That wheresoe'er my feet have swerved, His chastening turned me back ; That more and more a providence Of love is understood, Making the springs of time and sense Sweet with eternal good ; That...
Seite 3 - This is a very useful and amusing book. It is a good work, very well done. The authoress is quite equal in power and grace to Miss Strickland. She must have spent great time and labour in collecting the information, which she imparts in an easy and agreeable manner. It is difficult to lay down her book after having once begun it. This is owing partly to the interesting nature of the subject, partly to the skilful manner in which it hai been treated.
Seite 9 - ... accurate information as to the geology, the scenery, products, and resources of the regions explored, with notices of the religion, manners, and customs of the native tribes. The continual sporting adventures, and other remarkable occurrences, intermingled with the narrative of travel, make the book as interesting to read as a romance, as, indeed, a good book of travels ought always to be. The illustrations by Wolf are admirably designed, and most of them represent scenes as striking as any witnessed...
Seite 9 - Ngami was reached by a route that had been deemed impracticable, but which proves to be the shortest and the best. The work contains much scientific and accurate information...
Seite 3 - Valois. We refer our readers to the volumes themselves for the interesting details of the life and reign of Henry IH., his residence in Poland, his marriage with Louise de Lorraine, his cruelties, his hypocrisies, his penances, his assassination by the hands of the monk Jaques Clement, &c. Upon these points, as well as with reference to other persons who occupied a prominent position during this period, abundant information is afforded by Miss Freer; and the public will feel with us that a deep debt...
Seite 2 - HISTORY OF THE REIGN OF HENRY IV., KING OF FRANCE AND NAVARRE. From numerous Original Sources. By MISS FREER. Author of " The Lives of Marguerite d'Angouleme, Elizabeth de Valois, Henry III,
Seite 8 - Seveu years of wandering, thirty-nine thousand five hundred miles of moving to and fro in a wild and almost unknown country, should yield a book worth reading, and they do.
Seite 180 - Whatever crazy sorrow saith, No life that breathes with human breath Has ever truly long'd for death. ' 'Tis life, whereof our nerves are scant, Oh life, not death, for which we pant ; More life, and fuller, that I want.
Seite 219 - All as God wills, who wisely heeds To give or to withhold, And knoweth more of all my needs Than all my prayers have told.