The MagnoliaMonson Bancroft, 1854 |
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... Duty , · The Carrier - Pigeon , · • The Maid of the Mill , · Pago . 11 19 • • · 21 33 35 The Heart's Awakening , The Adventures of Carlo Franconi , The Blessing , • Self - Love and True Love , To M. A. G. , · The Withered Rose , 44 46 ...
... Duty , · The Carrier - Pigeon , · • The Maid of the Mill , · Pago . 11 19 • • · 21 33 35 The Heart's Awakening , The Adventures of Carlo Franconi , The Blessing , • Self - Love and True Love , To M. A. G. , · The Withered Rose , 44 46 ...
Стр. 27
... duties of the rich to the poor , that , for the life of me , I never could find sufficient time to perform them . could not forbear to talk - Nevertheless , I it was so pleasant , so easy too ; and with no other effort , it made me a ...
... duties of the rich to the poor , that , for the life of me , I never could find sufficient time to perform them . could not forbear to talk - Nevertheless , I it was so pleasant , so easy too ; and with no other effort , it made me a ...
Стр. 29
... duties of the rich , and the rights of the poor- although now and then , for the look of the thing , my name sparkled in a guinea subscription for a Home for the Homeless , or some such public benevolence , I would buy buy where I might ...
... duties of the rich , and the rights of the poor- although now and then , for the look of the thing , my name sparkled in a guinea subscription for a Home for the Homeless , or some such public benevolence , I would buy buy where I might ...
Стр. 31
... duty and my fate . Thus , for every stitch you took , I felt your needle - head go clean into what seemed my flesh . And my sense of feeling was sharpened into spiritual suffering . For fourteen hours a - day , have I felt- incessantly ...
... duty and my fate . Thus , for every stitch you took , I felt your needle - head go clean into what seemed my flesh . And my sense of feeling was sharpened into spiritual suffering . For fourteen hours a - day , have I felt- incessantly ...
Стр. 37
to hear ; or , if a sense of politeness imposes silence as a duty , the constraint only heightens the annoyance and impatience of the company . When the elaborate performance is over , it is followed by a profusion of thanks and ...
to hear ; or , if a sense of politeness imposes silence as a duty , the constraint only heightens the annoyance and impatience of the company . When the elaborate performance is over , it is followed by a profusion of thanks and ...
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Alfred Amaury Angelina Atkins beautiful beloved beside black kettle bride bright Campiano canonical hour child Clemence comfort countenance cried Daffy daugh daughter dear dearest delight DORA GREENWELL dream duty Edward Edward Morton elegant bride Emily exclaimed eyes face faint father feelings felt flowers gaze gentle girl hand happy Hargrave heard heart hour husband Isabella Jacopo Jane Janet knew lady Laguiab look Lucy Madame Maid mamma Manelli manikin Margaret Marion Miss Lilly white Miss Lillywhite Miss Milicent morning Morton mother MOUNTAIN DAISY Nanina never Oldcourt Oswald Lansing Ottowa passed passionate emotion Pietro poor Rosalie rose seemed Sire de Nesle sister smile soon sorrow spirit Standfast Stubbs sweet tailor's wife tears thee thimble thing thought told Toulouse village voice Wabegwona watched whispered wish wonder words young
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Стр. 9 - We have laughed at little jests ; For the fount of hope was gushing, Warm and joyous, in our breasts ; But laughter now hath fled thy lip, And sullen glooms thy brow. We have been gay together : Shall a light word part us now ? We have been sad together ; We have wept, with bitter tears, O'er the grass-grown graves where slumbered The hopes of early years ; The voices which are silent there Would bid thee clear thy brow.
Стр. 74 - Stern Lawgiver ! yet thou dost wear The Godhead's most benignant grace; Nor know we anything so fair As is the smile upon thy face: Flowers laugh before thee on their beds And fragrance in thy footing treads ; Thou dost preserve the stars from wrong; And the most ancient heavens, through Thee, are fresh and strong.
Стр. 9 - WE HAVE BEEN FRIENDS TOGETHERWE have been friends together, In sunshine and in shade ; Since first beneath the chestnut- trees In infancy we played. But coldness dwells within thy heart— A cloud is on thy brow ; We have been friends together — Shall a light word part us now...
Стр. 232 - So is it with true Christian hearts; Their mutual share in Jesus' blood An everlasting bond imparts Of holiest brotherhood: Oh! might we all our lineage prove, Give and forgive, do good and love, By soft endearments in kind strife Lightening the load of daily life...
Стр. 48 - Egyptian truth : if not, she had unconsciously acted upon the unknown recipe, and had preserved herself in the sweetness of her disposition — in the honey of her goodness. She was a pattern old maid. Yet a pattern, we would hope, never to be followed ; for it is such women who make the real wives and mothers. Miss Lillywhite, like Miss Venus de Medicis, should remain a single perfection : alone in sweetness and beauty, to show what celibacy and art can do ; to be admired as samples, but never to...
Стр. 278 - Fragments of plates, broken mortar, rags, and old hats, lay scattered around, all which bore a very uninviting aspect. The Angel pointed out in the midst of all this confused rubbish, some broken fragments of a flowerpot, and a clump of earth which had fallen out of it, and was only held together by the withered roots of a wild-flower, which had been thrown out into the street because it was considered utterly worthless. " We will take this with us," said the Angel ; " and I will tell thee why, as...
Стр. 276 - Lo, all this did an Angel of God relate, whilst he bore a little child to Heaven ; and the child heard as if in a dream, and the Angel winged his flight over those spots in the child's home where the little one had been wont to play, and they passed through gardens which were filled with glorious flowers.
Стр. 55 - exclaimed Angelina. " We returned home ; my lover upbraided — I retorted ; we had a shocking quarrel, and — he left the house to write me a farewell letter. In a week he was on his voyage to India ; in a twelvemonth he had married an Indian lady, as rich as an idol, and I — after thirty years — am still Caroline Lillywhite, spinster.
Стр. 280 - ... and rejoiced the eye with their beauty ; and when the Lord called him hence, he turned, even in death, towards his cherished plant. He has now been a year with God — a year has the flower stood forgotten in the window, and now it is withered ; therefore has it been thrown out with the rubbish into the street. And this is the flower — the poor withered flower • — which we have added to our nosegay ; for this flower has imparted more joy than the rarest and brightest blossom which ever...
Стр. 48 - Englishwoman, carried in her unfading beauty the assertion of her British race. How much triumphant beauty all over the world fades and yields, as teens blow into twenties, as twenties wrinkle into thirties ! Now, your truly beautiful Englishwoman, with her carnations and lilies, will carry her colors up to two-score-and-ten. Nay, we have known some veterans, blooming with a sprinkling of years over tyrannous fifty. And Miss Lillywhite was as jocund as she was handsome. It is said, there is no better...