Tales of a physician |
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accordingly acquaintance affection Antwerp appeared attention Barbara Baronet beauty blessed Caleb called character chief mate circumstances Clara Colonel Tyrrell consolation cottage countenance Counterplea course crime daugh daughter death deemed door Dorking duty Edward Elizabeth Elphinstone Emma Everton evidence exclaimed expression father feelings flung fortune frequent frock coat geant gentleman Gibbins girl Godfrey grace hand happened happiness heard heart honour hope hour housekeeper humble inquired knew lady lence libertine Mabel Major Elmslie manner marriage matter melancholy ment Merton metropolis mind Miss Freemantle Miss Stanley mother nature neighbouring never nexion object obtain occasion Oldham passed perceived person placed pleasure possessed postchaise proceeded propen racter received rejoined rendered reply retired returned Richard Turner rienced scene Simon Stringer Sir Benjamin smile Smith society spirit Stephen Hopper stranger succeeded taste tion Tomkins took village virtues window witness woman young
Popularne fragmenty
Strona 151 - When good men pursue The path mark'd out by virtue, the blest saints With joy look on it, and seraphic angels Clap their celestial wings in heavenly plaudits, To see a scene of grace so well presented, The fiends, and men made up of envy, mourning.
Strona 260 - Even if we looked on lovely woman but as on a rose, an exquisite production of the summer hours of life, it would be idle to deny her influence in making even those summer hours sweeter. But, as the companion of the mind, as the very model of a friendship that no chance can shake, as the pleasant sharer of the heart of heart, the being to whom man returns after the tumult of the day, like the worshipper to a secret shrine, to revive his nobler tastes and virtues at a source pure from the evil of...
Strona 183 - DOMESTIC Love ! not in proud palace halls Is often seen thy beauty to abide ; Thy dwelling is in lowly cottage walls, That in the thickets of the woodbine hide ; With hum of bees around, and from the side Of woody hills some little bubbling spring, Shining along through banks with harebells dyed ; And many a bird to warble on the wing, When Morn her saffron robe o'er heaven and earth doth fling.
Strona 27 - All along war's weary way he had "fought a good fight,
Strona 45 - I am much obliged to you, Arthur," said the other, with a smile of peculiar significance, "for I am convinced of your sincerity; and, now that I have let you into a secret, which I thought every body knew, perhaps you. will withdraw your plea , and go down to Dorking with us." " But what will my clients say?
Strona 227 - Marry, this; since you are peremptory. Remember, Upon mere hope of your great match, I lent you A thousand pounds. Put me in good security, And suddenly, by mortgage or by statute, Of some of your new possessions-, or I'll have you Dragged in your lavender robes to the jail.
Strona 148 - When the ear heard her, then it blessed her; and when the eye saw her, it gave witness to her : Because she delivered the poor that cried, and the fatherless, and him that had none to help him. The blessing of him that was ready to perish came upon her, and she caused the widow's heart to sing for joy.
Strona 94 - Redeemer liveth; and that,'though my sins be as scarlet, they shall be made whiter than snow; though they be red like crimson, yet shall they be as wool.
Strona 42 - ... of credit which they attached to the witnesses on the respective sides, and left the issue entirely in their hands. The jury retired to consider their verdict, and, from the duration of their absence, it was to be inferred that they had some difficulty in making up their minds. In the mean time, a breathless anxiety appeared to pervade the court: the very barristers, in spite of their professional coldness, exhibited signs of impatience, and, when the jury returned, the voice of the cryer, in...
Strona 39 - ... the opposite counsel had, by his eloquent and ingenious speech, succeeded in establishing a strong prejudice against the defendant, in the minds of the jury. He felt, therefore, that much of his chance of success depended upon the effect with which he could combat his adversary with his own weapons. He commenced by stating the case of his client, and, in doing so, collected all its favourable points, and presented them to the jury in the simplest possible form. He then called their attention...