The Rivals: Tracy's Ambition, Tom 2J. & J. Harper, 1830 |
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Strona 20
... face and shoulders ; a common custom in uttering maledictions of peculiar solein- nity and bitterness . Extending , through this unseemly veil , her thin , yellow , and skinny hands , clasped feebly together , she had already faltered ...
... face and shoulders ; a common custom in uttering maledictions of peculiar solein- nity and bitterness . Extending , through this unseemly veil , her thin , yellow , and skinny hands , clasped feebly together , she had already faltered ...
Strona 21
... face with an expression of bitter hate and rage , while her cheeks , wrinkled and dragged by age and pain , acquired a flushing and a quiver- ing redness , and her black and wind - scorched lips were drawn back with a malignant grin ...
... face with an expression of bitter hate and rage , while her cheeks , wrinkled and dragged by age and pain , acquired a flushing and a quiver- ing redness , and her black and wind - scorched lips were drawn back with a malignant grin ...
Strona 29
... faces . I'm not to be gulled with a story of the A- yeomanry stopping to get drunk at your house at a time when all good subjects should be in their beds . ' To save the pannels of the slender - door , they were ad- mitted . I perceived ...
... faces . I'm not to be gulled with a story of the A- yeomanry stopping to get drunk at your house at a time when all good subjects should be in their beds . ' To save the pannels of the slender - door , they were ad- mitted . I perceived ...
Strona 31
... faces and long for the dawn . Purtill endeavoured to keep us alive by singing the fol- lowing song , while we took a part in the chorus , rather in order to show that we would not be depressed by TRACY'S AMBITION . 31.
... faces and long for the dawn . Purtill endeavoured to keep us alive by singing the fol- lowing song , while we took a part in the chorus , rather in order to show that we would not be depressed by TRACY'S AMBITION . 31.
Strona 34
... face close to the bars , dealt him a great blow on the nose , exclaiming , " Upon my word , sir , you are right , for ( another blow ) I begin to find myself getting a little spirit already . " " The deuse you are , " cried Purtill ...
... face close to the bars , dealt him a great blow on the nose , exclaiming , " Upon my word , sir , you are right , for ( another blow ) I begin to find myself getting a little spirit already . " " The deuse you are , " cried Purtill ...
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Abel Tracy afeerd afther agony answer appeared arms asked bad company Batt blunderbuss brother brow bulrushes chair child Clancy continued cottage countenance Croppies Cushlane-Beg daughter Doody door Ellen ELLEN TRACY exclaimed eyes face father fear feeling fellow felt fingers fire forgive Gawyl gazing gentle gentleman gray crag ground hand happiness head hear heard heart Heaven Henry Dalton honour hurried instant Insurrection Act Ireland Irish Killarney knew larn leave lence light Limerick lips look Maney manner masther McGawyl mind monstrance morning Morty mountain murder never night once Oyeh passed passion paused perceived poor Purtill racter replied rience Rowan ruin scene Shanahan shoulder silence Skerrit smile spirit stranger sudden suddenly sure tall tell thing thought tion tithes tone took voice walked wish Wisha woman word young
Popularne fragmenty
Strona 120 - And loves to live i' the sun, Seeking the food he eats And pleased with what he gets, Come hither, come hither, come hither: Here shall he see No enemy But winter and rough weather.
Strona 32 - Mingling wit and sense with pleasure. Who likes good wine for the joy it brings, And merrily laughs and gaily sings; With heart and bumper always full, Never maudlin, never dull. Your friend let him be, 'Tween you and me, That man is excellent company.
Strona 171 - MAIDEN EYES You never bade me hope, 'tis true; I asked you not to swear: But I looked in those eyes of blue, And read a promise there. The vow should bind, with maiden sighs That maiden lips have spoken : But that which looks from maiden eyes Should last of all be broken. Gerald Griffin [1803-1840] HALLOWED PLACES I PASS my days among the quiet places Made sacred by your feet.
Strona 183 - They were the first who painted the Irish peasant sternly from the life ; they placed him before the world in all his ragged energy and cloudy loftiness of spirit, they painted him as he is, goaded by the sense of national and personal wrong, and venting his long pent up agony in the savage cruelty of his actions, in the powerful idiomatic eloquence of his language, in the wild truth and unregulated generosity...
Strona 181 - Lord, we beseech thee, these branches of the palm-tree, or olive-tree ; and grant that what thy people this day act corporally for thy honour, they may perform the same spiritually with the greatest devotion, by gaining a victory over their enemy, and ardently loving mercy. Thro'.
Strona 183 - We have endeavoured in most instances, where pictures of Irish cottage life have been introduced, to furnish a softening corollary to the more exciting moral chronicles of our predecessors, to bring forward the sorrows and the affections more frequently than the violent and fearful passions of the people.