The Victorian LadyGordon & Cremonesi, 1977 - Всего страниц: 164 |
Результаты поиска по книге
Результаты 1 – 3 из 28
Стр. 11
... considered a lady . To be so considered , a woman had to have a certain education and , especially at the beginning of the era , a woman with any sort of education had to be the daughter of a reasonably affluent and cultivated man . But ...
... considered a lady . To be so considered , a woman had to have a certain education and , especially at the beginning of the era , a woman with any sort of education had to be the daughter of a reasonably affluent and cultivated man . But ...
Стр. 106
... considered shop assistants to be at the servant level in the ordinary way . But women who worked in offices were generally from the lower middle classes and as such considered themselves and were considered by others to be ladies , if ...
... considered shop assistants to be at the servant level in the ordinary way . But women who worked in offices were generally from the lower middle classes and as such considered themselves and were considered by others to be ladies , if ...
Стр. 140
... considered , " does not know how to make a pretty woman of herself " ; her dress , he wrote , might consist of " violet or dark crimson silks , of grass - green flowered gowns , blue sashes , jewellery — the whole employed sometimes to ...
... considered , " does not know how to make a pretty woman of herself " ; her dress , he wrote , might consist of " violet or dark crimson silks , of grass - green flowered gowns , blue sashes , jewellery — the whole employed sometimes to ...
Содержание
Introduction | 9 |
The education of the Victorian lady | 16 |
Getting married | 26 |
Авторские права | |
Не показаны другие разделы: 8
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
allowed Augustus Hare ball Becky Beeton birth breakfast Brontë Cecilia Parke Cecilia Ridley Charlotte Charlotte Brontë Charlotte Yonge child church classes clothes colours costume Countess Countess of Jersey dancing deal described diary dinner divorce doctors Dorothea dress dressmaker duties E. F. Benson England fact feelings Gaskell Gaskell's gentlemen George Eliot girls governess hair Henrietta Stanley Hippolyte Taine household husband Jane Carlyle Lady Frederick Cavendish Lady Stanley later letters lived London Collegiate School Lord Lucy Lyttelton magazine maid marriage married Mary Collier Middlemarch Miss mistress mother mourning nineteenth century North London Collegiate novelists novels nurse occasion party passion Perfect Lady piety played poor prostitute Queen Victoria remarked seems servants sexual Sir Matthew Ridley social society suggested Sunday took travelled Victoria's reign Victorian era Victorian lady Victorian women wedding wife woman writing wrote young lady