The victims of society |
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Strona 2
... become ! for , I am too unused to censure to be capable of patiently enduring it . And yet , how can I hope to find the same absorbing affection , the same forbearing kindness , that I have experienced from my infancy ? But , no ; I ...
... become ! for , I am too unused to censure to be capable of patiently enduring it . And yet , how can I hope to find the same absorbing affection , the same forbearing kindness , that I have experienced from my infancy ? But , no ; I ...
Strona 2
... become ! for , I am too unused to censure to be capable of patiently enduring it . And yet , how can I hope to find the same absorbing affection , the same for- bearing kindness , that I have experienced from my infancy ? But , no ; I ...
... become ! for , I am too unused to censure to be capable of patiently enduring it . And yet , how can I hope to find the same absorbing affection , the same for- bearing kindness , that I have experienced from my infancy ? But , no ; I ...
Strona 7
... to which Lord Delaward at first submitted with so bad a grace , is expired ; and I now may become a wife , with that indispensable , and only surety for domestic peace , a perfect reliance on the principles . of THE VICTIMS OF SOCIETY . 7.
... to which Lord Delaward at first submitted with so bad a grace , is expired ; and I now may become a wife , with that indispensable , and only surety for domestic peace , a perfect reliance on the principles . of THE VICTIMS OF SOCIETY . 7.
Strona 48
... become indifferent to me , and I wonder how I could ever have imagined that I loved him . When subsequently he came to me , all rap- ture at the consent of my father , and thanked me for having obtained it , I experienced an instinctive ...
... become indifferent to me , and I wonder how I could ever have imagined that I loved him . When subsequently he came to me , all rap- ture at the consent of my father , and thanked me for having obtained it , I experienced an instinctive ...
Strona 60
... becomes enlivened by he loves , and , better still , they love ; until all terminates in the past tense , we have loved . Before , however , this fatal stage of the conjugation arrives , how many unhappy hours , and lowering clouds ...
... becomes enlivened by he loves , and , better still , they love ; until all terminates in the past tense , we have loved . Before , however , this fatal stage of the conjugation arrives , how many unhappy hours , and lowering clouds ...
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
acquaintance affection affectionate agreeable Alicia amusement Annandale House Annandale's appears Armand aunt beauty believe Carency charms cher chère amie chère Caroline chère Delphine child Comtesse Hohenlinden conduct console COUNTESS OF ANNANDALE COUNTESS OF BLESSINGTON COUNTESS OF DELAWARD crime daugh dear Augusta dear Mary dearest dreadful Duchess escritoire excited eyes fancy fashion father and mother fearful feel felt femme de chambre Florestan fortune guilt happiness heart honour husband imagine indulgence innocent Lady Annandale Lady Augusta Lady Delaward Lady Vernon leave LEICESTER SQUARE less letter London look Lord and Lady Lord Annan Lord Annandale Lord Delaward Lord Nottingham Lord Vernon Madame manner MARQUESS OF NOTTINGHAM MARQUISE DE VILLEROI marriage married Mary Melfort ment mind Miss Montressor MORDAUNT never painful passion person pity poor present render reputation seemed sentiment smile society tears thought tion told tremble vanity virtue wife wish woman women wounded wretch young
Popularne fragmenty
Strona 272 - When you shall these unlucky deeds relate, Speak of me as I am; nothing extenuate, Nor set down aught in malice: then must you speak Of one that...
Strona 254 - Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased ; Pluck from the memory a rooted sorrow ; Raze out the written troubles of the brain ; And, with some sweet, oblivious antidote, Cleanse the stuffed bosom of that perilous stuff, Which weighs upon the heart ? Doct.
Strona 166 - Heptarchy, have been seen humbling themselves, by the lowest arts of degradation, to soften the obdurate autocratesses; and we fear it is no exaggeration to say, that more than one parvenu has been known to barter his vote in parliament, and more than one parvenue her honour, for a ball-ticket. The prestige has greatly abated, and the institution is now tottering to its fall ; but its origin is worth recording, as a ludicrous phenomenon in the progress of society.
Strona 125 - France, which, even though wanting in sincerity, possess a certain charm ; as flattery, if judiciously administered, is always acceptable, however much we may despise the flatterer.
Strona 201 - Pray do not trouble yourself on the subject," answered Lady Sophia, "I have no intention of wedding a Nimrod, I assure you, for I am of opinion that it is better to lead apes in a place not to be named to ears polite, than to be tied to a fool on earth.
Strona 166 - A few pretty woman, not in the highest rank of the nobility, met at Devonshire House to practise quadrilles, then recently imported from the continent. The establishment of a subscription-ball was suggested, to which none but the very e"lite were to be admissible ; the subscription to be low, with the view of checking the obtrusive vulgarity of wealth. The fancy took, and when it transpired that the patronesses had actually refused a most estimable English Duchess, all London became mad to be admitted...
Strona 164 - Mscenases, who patronise poets and philosophers, from the association with whom they expect to derive distinction. For gentle dulness they have a peculiar predilection — from sympathy, I suppose ; a fellow-feeling being said to make men wondrous kind. A few of the houses with the most pretensions to literary taste have their tame poets and petits litterateurs, who run about as docile, and more parasitical, than lap-dogs; and, like them, are equally well-fed, ay, and certainly equally spoiled.
Strona 204 - ... Benedicts every night — at least, it is but charitable to suppose that such is their object. These very clubs, too, furnish another and powerful antidote to matrimony. The luxurious sensualists who frequent them, being, for the most part, gastronomers, who prefer a well-dressed dinner to the best-dressed woman in the world, are well aware that the recherche repasts, with
Strona 58 - Lablache's is also a voice that has great charms for me. It comes pealing forth, grand and powerful as a choir in some lofty temple : while Rubini's always reminds me of the plaintive, never to be forgotten chant of the Miserere in the Sixtine chapel at Rome, which, though heard while I was yet only a child, I remember as distinctly as if it had been but yesterday.
Strona 36 - I verily believe, shall see again, except in her. Then, her figure ! by Jove, it is matchless ! All the elasticity and bounding animation of the child, with all the rounded beauty of contour of the woman. Arms that might serve as models to the sculptor ; hands that look as...