Matilda: A Tale of the Day ...H. Colburn, 1825 - 307 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página 3
... least , we shall hear the lions all announced- we shall know who the inmates of the menagerie are to be to - day . " Hardly had this consolation been suggested , when the door was opened , not by the regular officer , the groom of the ...
... least , we shall hear the lions all announced- we shall know who the inmates of the menagerie are to be to - day . " Hardly had this consolation been suggested , when the door was opened , not by the regular officer , the groom of the ...
Página 4
... least , from the circumstance of meeting in the house of a common friend , have been admitted to the local rank of acquaintances , and received the regular brevet allowances of nods , smiles , & c . But here we are more afraid of being ...
... least , from the circumstance of meeting in the house of a common friend , have been admitted to the local rank of acquaintances , and received the regular brevet allowances of nods , smiles , & c . But here we are more afraid of being ...
Página 20
... least attractive part of the intimacy to Matilda , may be imagined ; but that it was the most beneficial , may likewise be doubted . But be this as it may , Lord Wakefield , who was never suspected of blindness to his own interest , or ...
... least attractive part of the intimacy to Matilda , may be imagined ; but that it was the most beneficial , may likewise be doubted . But be this as it may , Lord Wakefield , who was never suspected of blindness to his own interest , or ...
Página 35
... least , as impor- tant an object as the adornment of the person . As Matilda entered , she seemed the guardian ge- nius of taste in this her favourite temple . Here her return had been most impatiently expected by her attendant spirit ...
... least , as impor- tant an object as the adornment of the person . As Matilda entered , she seemed the guardian ge- nius of taste in this her favourite temple . Here her return had been most impatiently expected by her attendant spirit ...
Página 47
... least , I'm sure , so uncle Smithson found it . They say , he must make six ; so he may as well have one of his own kin as another . Who knows but , in time , Jem may live to be a - what was that great gentleman , who so civilly wrote ...
... least , I'm sure , so uncle Smithson found it . They say , he must make six ; so he may as well have one of his own kin as another . Who knows but , in time , Jem may live to be a - what was that great gentleman , who so civilly wrote ...
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Términos y frases comunes
acquaintance admiration anxious appearance arrived Augustus Arlingford Baronet beauty Boodle's Boulby brother carriage CHAPTER character charm Cheshire circumstances Colonel Canteen conceal connexion daugh daughter dear Delaval Park dinner door Dornton doubtful duties Eatington Emily endeavoured England English excited eyes favourable feelings felt female Geneva Genoa hand happiness Harry Wordsworth hear heard heart heroine Hobson family induced intimacy Italy knew La Scala Laceby Lady Ma Lady Matilda Lady Ormsby length light sail look Lord George Lord Ormsby Lord Wakefield manner Mechlin ment Milan mind Miss Anne Miss Hobson morning mother Naples never old Hobson once Ormsby's party passed Penryn person pleasure present recollection rendered replied Rome Santelmo seemed Simperton Sir James Sir James's situation society soon spirit sure Sydney thing thought tilda tion Tom Fool tone turned villa whilst wonder Woodhead young
Pasajes populares
Página 268 - That man is little to be envied, whose patriotism would not gain force upon the plain of Marathon, or whose piety would not grow • warmer among the ruins of lona.
Página 148 - That strain again ! — it had a dying fall : Oh, it came o'er my ear like the sweet south That breathes upon a bank of violets, ( Stealing and giving odour !— Enough ; no more ; ( 'Tis not so sweet now, as it was before.
Página 206 - Under a tuft of shade that on a green Stood whispering soft, by a fresh fountain side They sat them down...
Página 46 - Hobson was not at the time objected to. He was a steady, calculating foreman, in a large manufactory at Manchester. This situation he had gradually improved into that of a master of foremen ; and his small back lodging he had changed into the largest extent of staring brick front in Manchester. Mrs. Hobson, at the time of her marriage, was a silly, showy, bustling, chattering little body ; with a brisk figure, and brisker tongue, good humoured, illiterate, and vulgar.
Página 47 - Jemima, was at that becoming age when young ladies' hair is neither long nor short. As to the conversation of these Manchester graces, — being in considerable awe of a person of whom the Morning Post said so much as it did of Lady Matilda, they confined that to occasional verbal corrections of their mother's slip-slop, which their boarding school education fully qualified them to give.
Página 13 - ... circle, seemed anxiously to solicit a protecting nod from those around him, confirmative of the acquaintance he hoped he had made. Then came the wellestablished man of the world, who seemed carelessly to postpone the duties of recognition, till dinner and lights afforded him a more convenient opportunity of doing so. To him succeeded the 'cidevant jeune homme,' whose 'way of life is fall'n into the sear — the yellow leaf...
Página 1 - Raise me a little higher in my bed. — Blush I not, brother Acton ? Blush I not, Sir Charles ? Can you not read my fault writ in my cheek ? Is not my crime there ? Tell me, gentlemen.
Página 36 - The courtier's, soldier's, scholar's, eye, tongue, sword; The expectancy and rose of the fair state, The glass of fashion and the mould of form, The observed of all observers, quite, quite down!
Página 48 - I'm sure Jem couldn't have done better." She then broke at once into the subject now always uppermost in her thoughts ; namely, the extraordinary circumstance of being actually about to go abroad. " Well/' said she, " I hope that we shall all live as one family in foreign parts. To think of my going trapesing out of Old England! but my daughters must have the same advantages as the Miss Tomkins's, though they did make old Tomkins a knight the other day. But an't my brother a baronet ? to say nothing...