Our valley, by the author of 'The children of Seeligsberg'.1877 |
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Strona 19
... surprise . For there , bright in the afternoon sunshine , were our own hills , with their familiar forms rising one above another , each beacon and heathered knoll well - known to me , and there was the valley stretch- ing all along to ...
... surprise . For there , bright in the afternoon sunshine , were our own hills , with their familiar forms rising one above another , each beacon and heathered knoll well - known to me , and there was the valley stretch- ing all along to ...
Strona 27
Our valley. Mrs. Grindley took the plate , and , to our great surprise , dropped it with a sudden shriek and jump . Down on her lap , all over the black satin gown , fell the buttered toast , leaving great stains of grease wherever it ...
Our valley. Mrs. Grindley took the plate , and , to our great surprise , dropped it with a sudden shriek and jump . Down on her lap , all over the black satin gown , fell the buttered toast , leaving great stains of grease wherever it ...
Strona 29
... surprise the child did not seem frightened . She only stepped leisurely down from her seat on the bridge and came towards us . Harold was the first to speak . " Do you live here ? " he asked , pointing to the mill . " Yes , " was the ...
... surprise the child did not seem frightened . She only stepped leisurely down from her seat on the bridge and came towards us . Harold was the first to speak . " Do you live here ? " he asked , pointing to the mill . " Yes , " was the ...
Strona 43
... surprise , partly I think because of his jovial ways and the jokes and stories he had always ready at hand , and a good deal because he had to do with horses , for which Harold always had a passion . And the two would sit and talk by ...
... surprise , partly I think because of his jovial ways and the jokes and stories he had always ready at hand , and a good deal because he had to do with horses , for which Harold always had a passion . And the two would sit and talk by ...
Strona 57
... surprised me . It emboldened me to reply- " It is not that I am faithless , Fortune , but you have so many friends now I cannot expect to see as much of you as when we were children . If I do not come to the mill oftener , it is because ...
... surprised me . It emboldened me to reply- " It is not that I am faithless , Fortune , but you have so many friends now I cannot expect to see as much of you as when we were children . If I do not come to the mill oftener , it is because ...
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ash trees asked better blue bright Cecily Cloth boards Clytsall colour Crown 8vo dance dear Dick Dick Winter door Exmoor eyes face Fairlie Farmer Falls Farmer Malsbury's father Fcap feel felt Fortune Mavor Fortune's fuchsias girl glad gone grey Grindley hand happy happy days Harold hear heard heart High Coombe hill-side hills HISTORY OF INDIA horse Isham Judith knew laddie lady laugh Laurence Laurie leave LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS live looked Lynch married master mill mind Miss Sabin moor morning never night old place parlour poor pretty remember ride Rockhead round Runcorn's seemed seen sight Silas Silscote Sir Edmond Sir Guy smile stood strange surprise talking Taunton tell tenant thee there's things thought told toned paper turned Uncle Christopher valley voice waiting walked waves white pony wife wished wonder words Wyncourt young
Popularne fragmenty
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Strona 85 - Ah, such is the fate of our life's early promise, So passing the springtide of joy we have known! Each wave that we danced on at morning ebbs from us And leaves us at eve on the bleak shore alone.
Strona 254 - EVENINGS AT THE MICROSCOPE ; or, Researches among the Minuter Organs and Forms of Animal Life. By P. H. GOSSE, Esq., FRS A new edition, revised and annotated. Post 8vo Cloth boards 4 o FAN'S SILKEN STRING. By ANNETTE LYSTER, author of " Northwind and Sunshine,
Strona 23 - I loved the brimming wave that swam Thro' quiet meadows round the mill, The sleepy pool above the dam, The pool beneath it never still, The meal-sacks on the whiten 'd floor, The dark round of the dripping wheel, The very air about the door Made misty with the floating meal.
Strona 210 - I sing. (O Swallow, Swallow, flying, flying South, Fly to her, and fall upon her gilded eaves, And tell her, tell her, what I tell to thee. *O tell her, Swallow, thou that knowest each, That bright and fierce and fickle is the South, And dark and true and tender is the North. 'O...
Strona 3 - The little window where the sun Came peeping in at morn; He never came a wink too soon, Nor brought too long a day, But now, I often wish the night Had borne my breath away! I remember, I remember, The roses, red and white, The violets, and the lily-cups, Those flowers made of light!