Home: A Novel, Tom 3J. Mawman, 1802 |
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Strona 7
... myself to come to her . I found her suffering the infirmities of age in person , but unimpaired in mind . It gave me inexpressible satisfaction to be able , at the close A 4 HOME . scribe the sensations with which I sometimes ...
... myself to come to her . I found her suffering the infirmities of age in person , but unimpaired in mind . It gave me inexpressible satisfaction to be able , at the close A 4 HOME . scribe the sensations with which I sometimes ...
Strona 8
... person lefs at leisure , or less devoted to her than myself could have done . No situation , however , could evince more than her's did , the happy effects of a life passed in active benevolence . Although loaded with age and infirmity ...
... person lefs at leisure , or less devoted to her than myself could have done . No situation , however , could evince more than her's did , the happy effects of a life passed in active benevolence . Although loaded with age and infirmity ...
Strona 23
... persons , both from the regard I bear them , and because they knew and loved Almorne ; -but it is with yourself alone , I can enter into the concerns of life with the feelings of my early days ; -it is with you , and for you only , I ...
... persons , both from the regard I bear them , and because they knew and loved Almorne ; -but it is with yourself alone , I can enter into the concerns of life with the feelings of my early days ; -it is with you , and for you only , I ...
Strona 27
... persons are insensible to small distresses , they will be apt to want feeling for greater . It is indeed of importance to happiness , not to allow trifling sorrows to usurp the place of great ones ; but we ought not to refuse the ...
... persons are insensible to small distresses , they will be apt to want feeling for greater . It is indeed of importance to happiness , not to allow trifling sorrows to usurp the place of great ones ; but we ought not to refuse the ...
Strona 29
... I can't imagine how people can allow themfelves to be in a pafsion ! When I am displeased , I am most inclined to be silent ; and the sight of a person in violent B 3 HOME . 29 have separated, because they cannot submit ...
... I can't imagine how people can allow themfelves to be in a pafsion ! When I am displeased , I am most inclined to be silent ; and the sight of a person in violent B 3 HOME . 29 have separated, because they cannot submit ...
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
acquainted affection afsistance afsured agreeable Almorne Almorne's amiable Anson answer anxiety anxious appeared aunt behaviour believe brother character chastity choly conduct Constantia countenance daugh daughter desire distrefs distress endeavoured expect exprefsed extremely father and mother favour fear feelings fortune Frederic gave girl give Gretna Green Hanway happineſs happy Harriet Hastings hope husband illneſs impofsible imprefsion induced informed inquiries intention interest knew Lady Ornville leave lefs leſs letter lofs Lydia manner marriage marry Matilda means melan ment Mifs Alderton Mifs Fanbrook Mifs Hargrave miserable morning neceſsary nefs never obliged opinion Ormesby Ornville's pafsion painful paſsed poſseſsion poſsible racter received regard render replied request respect sake Sally Cusliffe Sir Esmond Sir John Sir John rose situation society soon Sorell Sorell's speak suffer tell temper tenderneſs thought tion told tremely unhappineſs unhappy utmost wait walk wife wish woman women
Popularne fragmenty
Strona 15 - How soft the music of those village bells, Falling at intervals upon the ear In cadence sweet, now dying all away, Now pealing loud again, and louder still, Clear and sonorous, as the gale comes on ! With easy force it opens all the cells Where Mem'ry slept. Wherever I have heard A kindred melody, the scene recurs, And with it all its pleasures and its pains.
Strona 25 - As those we love decay, we die in part, String after string is sever'd from the heart ; Till loosen'd life at last — but breathing clay, Without one pang, is glad to fall away.
Strona 15 - There is in souls a sympathy with sounds; Some chord, in unison with what we hear, Is touched within us, and the heart replies.
Strona 24 - ... them of. Myriads rise to my remembrance, whom I have seen beaming with hope, and eager in pursuit, that are now swept from the earth. Not a town or village do I know, that does not speak to me of the ravages of time. The busy multitude appear as phantoms fleeting before...
Strona 25 - This truth is yet more painfully enforced bythe recollection of the numerous friends I have lost. Memory places them before me. I see the convivial boards at which they sat, where Youth and Age mingled together, in social...
Strona 24 - Even where deeply interested, I am still but acting a part for the sake of others. Nor does this arise solely from the memory of my own sorrows; it springs also from the contemplation of life.
Strona 112 - Madam, from every view I can. take of the subject, I am convinced that I should do morally wrong in receiving Salty fusliffe as a daughter-in-law ; and you must forgive my saying, that I desire you will never propose it to me again...
Strona 24 - Nor does this arise solely from the memory of my own sorrows; it springs also from the contemplation of life. At my age, a mind in the least saddened by misfortune, can hardly fail to be deeply...