Charles Auchester: A Memorial ...Hurst and Blackett, successors to H. Colburn, 1853 |
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Стр. 126
... portmanteau and chest which were brought this morning you may keep here , if you please , as well . " I did not thank him , for I was preoccupied with an infernal suggestion to my brain which I re- vealed in my utter terror . " Oh ! Sir ...
... portmanteau and chest which were brought this morning you may keep here , if you please , as well . " I did not thank him , for I was preoccupied with an infernal suggestion to my brain which I re- vealed in my utter terror . " Oh ! Sir ...
Стр. 193
... portmanteau full of books , and my private bed ; my violin asleep in its case , and last not least , his china cup and saucer in the little brown box ! While I was combing my hair , he stood and watched me with delight in his charming ...
... portmanteau full of books , and my private bed ; my violin asleep in its case , and last not least , his china cup and saucer in the little brown box ! While I was combing my hair , he stood and watched me with delight in his charming ...
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afraid Anastase André Ariel arms Aronach Auchester beautiful believe beneath blue bright brother Carl Carlino Carlomein Cecilia Charles Chevalier Seraphael child cried curtain dared dark Davy dear Delemann delicate door dream dressed excitement exclaimed exquisite eyes face feel felt fingers Florimond flowers Franz Fräulein Cerinthia gaze Germany green hair hall hand harpsichord hear heard heart heaven Iskar Josephine knew laughed light lips looked Maria master mean Mer de Glace Milans Milans-André Millicent morning never orchestra pale perhaps pianoforte play portmanteau replied rose scarcely seemed silver sister sky at night smile soul speak spoke Starwood stay stood strange Sunday song suppose sweet talk tell thee thine thing thou art thought Titania told tones took trombone turned violin voice wait walk wish wonder words write young
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Стр. 146 - All lives have their prose translation as well as their ideal meaning." Charles Auckestcr. BUT Kinnicutt opened wider to receive them than Mishaumok ad to let them go. If Mr. Gartney's invalidism had to be pleaded to get away with dignity, it was even more needed to shield with anything of quietness their entrance into the new sphere they had chosen. It is astonishing...
Стр. 180 - I have called it tumultuous—but merely in respect of rhythm — the harmonies were as clear and evolved as the modulation itself was sharp, keen, unanticipated, unapproachable. Through every bar reigned that vividly enunciated ideal, whose expression pertains to the one will alone in any age— the ideal, that binding together in suggestive imagery every form of beauty, symbolizes and represents something beyond them all. Here over the surge-like but fast-bound motivo —only like those tost ice-waves,...
Стр. 288 - Maria! have you actually been writing?" I sprang from the sofa quite wild, though I merely forsaw some touching memento in wordless lied, or scherzo for one-voiced instrument; of a onehearted theme. " I have not written a note, Carl — that remains to be done, and that is why I came back so soon; to be undisturbed and to learn of you, for you know more of such things than I do; for instance, how to arrange a score.
Стр. 180 - As first awoke the strange smooth wind-notes of the opening adagio, the fetterless chains of ice seemed to close around my heart. The movement had no blandness in its solemnity ; and so still and shiftless was the grouping of the harmonies, that a frigidity actual, as well as ideal, passed over my pores, and hushed my pulses. After a hundred such tense, yet clinging chords, the sustaining calm was illustrated, not broken, by a serpentine phrase of one lone oboe, pianissimo over the piano surface,...