Agatha's Husband: A Novel, Tom 2Chapman and Hall, 1853 |
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Strona 3
... light hair straggling out at the back , his eyes bent thoughtfully on the pavement , and his hands crossed be- hind him . " Holloa , Duke , " cried Nathanael , for the second time , before he caught the attention of this very abstracted ...
... light hair straggling out at the back , his eyes bent thoughtfully on the pavement , and his hands crossed be- hind him . " Holloa , Duke , " cried Nathanael , for the second time , before he caught the attention of this very abstracted ...
Strona 5
... light over the uncomely face that Agatha was quite startled and began to reconsider her first impression regarding it , - " Duke " Dugdale turned to walk on ; but just as the horse was starting , came back again . " Nathanael , you are ...
... light over the uncomely face that Agatha was quite startled and began to reconsider her first impression regarding it , - " Duke " Dugdale turned to walk on ; but just as the horse was starting , came back again . " Nathanael , you are ...
Strona 25
... to make the fortune of many a " wonderfully clever woman , " - the very last character which this light - spirited country - lady would probably have imagined her own . For Eulalie , she had relaxed into AGATHA'S HUSBAND . 25.
... to make the fortune of many a " wonderfully clever woman , " - the very last character which this light - spirited country - lady would probably have imagined her own . For Eulalie , she had relaxed into AGATHA'S HUSBAND . 25.
Strona 27
... lights , and prepared to ac- company them herself , the other two moving silently away into the drawing - room . Through the same sort of old - fashioned passages , but , as it seemed , to quite a dif- ferent part of the house , Agatha ...
... lights , and prepared to ac- company them herself , the other two moving silently away into the drawing - room . Through the same sort of old - fashioned passages , but , as it seemed , to quite a dif- ferent part of the house , Agatha ...
Strona 33
... light than Agatha had ever before received on the manners , characters , and history of the Har- per family , the Dugdales , and Anne Valery . But there was in her speech a certain re- tirence , as though all the common gossip of life ...
... light than Agatha had ever before received on the manners , characters , and history of the Har- per family , the Dugdales , and Anne Valery . But there was in her speech a certain re- tirence , as though all the common gossip of life ...
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Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
Anne Valery Anne's answered asked beautiful better blue veil boys Brian Harper BRIAN LOCKE brother child combe Holm cried daugh dear dinner door Dorset Dorsetshire drawing-room dress Dugdale's Duke Dugdale Elizabeth Elizabeth Harper Eulalie eyes face father feel felt Frederick Free-trade gentleman girl hand happy Harrie Harriet hear heard heart honour husband Kingcombe Holm knew lady laugh leaning listened little wife Locke Harper looked Major Harper Marmaduke married Mary minute Miss Harper Miss Valery Missus myste Nathanael ness never once paused perhaps pleasant poor post 8vo quiet remember rose round seemed silence sister sitting smile soul speak spoke Squire stood strange sure talk tell thanael thing Thornhurst thought to-day tone took Trenchard turned Uncle Brian Valery's voice walked Weymouth whispered wife wife's wish woman wonder words young
Popularne fragmenty
Strona 105 - How do I love thee? Let me count the ways. I love thee to the depth and breadth and height My soul can reach, when feeling out of sight For the ends of Being and ideal Grace. I love thee to the level of every day's Most quiet need, by sun and candlelight.
Strona 105 - Most quiet need, by sun and candlelight. I love thee freely, as men strive for right. I love thee purely, as they turn from praise. I love thee with the passion put to use In my old griefs, and with my childhood's faith. I love thee with a love I seemed to lose With my lost saints.
Strona 52 - Sad as the last which reddens over one That sinks with all we love below the verge; So sad, so fresh, the days that are no more.
Strona 102 - So faithful that she can see all his little faults — though she takes care no one else shall see them — yet would as soon think of loving him the less for these, as of ceasing to look up to heaven because there are a few clouds in the sky. So true and so fond, that she needs neither to vex him with her constancy nor burden him with her love, since both are self-existent, and entirely independent of anything he gives or takes away. Thus she will marry neither from liking, esteem, nor gratitude...
Strona 101 - ... the other, and thus my beaux jours will pass away, and my Ideal Lover will not then think me worth his while. Shall I never be at rest with him to love and understand me, to tell every thought and feeling, in far different scenes from these — under canvas before Rangoon — anywhere in Nature ? " I would have every woman marry ; not merely liking a man well enough to accept him for a husband, as some of our mothers teach us, and so cause many unhappy marriages, but loving him so holily that,...