The Magnolia, Or, Gift-book of FriendshipClara Arnold Phillips, Sampson, 1855 - Всего страниц: 287 |
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Стр. 78
... Marion Edwardes was seated at the other end of the drawing- room , seemingly engaged in sketching , but her pencil was held in silent thoughtfulness , while she looked earnestly towards her mother . After a moment's hesitation , she ...
... Marion Edwardes was seated at the other end of the drawing- room , seemingly engaged in sketching , but her pencil was held in silent thoughtfulness , while she looked earnestly towards her mother . After a moment's hesitation , she ...
Стр. 79
... Marion looked grieved , she added in a contrite tone : I hope , dearest Marion , you are not displeased with me ; I would not vex you for worlds . " . - So saying she kissed her cheek , and resuming her em- broidery , seated herself ...
... Marion looked grieved , she added in a contrite tone : I hope , dearest Marion , you are not displeased with me ; I would not vex you for worlds . " . - So saying she kissed her cheek , and resuming her em- broidery , seated herself ...
Стр. 80
... Marion and Lucy were at an age which peculiarly needed a mother's care , for they were just springing into womanhood ; but all that a father's tenderness could supply was bestowed by Mr. Edwardes , who , in each leisure hour , their ...
... Marion and Lucy were at an age which peculiarly needed a mother's care , for they were just springing into womanhood ; but all that a father's tenderness could supply was bestowed by Mr. Edwardes , who , in each leisure hour , their ...
Стр. 81
... Marion was his daily counsellor and stay , for she united to all the freshness of seventeen , the ripened judgment of a more advanced age ; but Lucy was his pride and his darling . Her dark eyes rested on him with such fond affection ...
... Marion was his daily counsellor and stay , for she united to all the freshness of seventeen , the ripened judgment of a more advanced age ; but Lucy was his pride and his darling . Her dark eyes rested on him with such fond affection ...
Стр. 82
... Marion and Lucy's lips . " Just as you please ; for I have no wish to deprive you of any innocent enjoyment . What say you , my grave and gentle Marion ? " inquired Mr. Edwardes , addressing his eldest daughter . " Oh , papa , as far as ...
... Marion and Lucy's lips . " Just as you please ; for I have no wish to deprive you of any innocent enjoyment . What say you , my grave and gentle Marion ? " inquired Mr. Edwardes , addressing his eldest daughter . " Oh , papa , as far as ...
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The Magnolia: Or Gift-Book of Friendship (Classic Reprint) Clara Arnold Недоступно для просмотра - 2015 |
The Magnolia: Or Gift-Book of Friendship (Classic Reprint) Clara Arnold Недоступно для просмотра - 2018 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
Alfred Amaury Angelina Atkins Aunt Milicent 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 hope hour husband Isabella Jacopo Jane Janet knew lady Laguiab look Lucy Madame mamma Manelli manikin Margaret Marion Miss Lillywhite Miss Milicent morning Morton mother MOUNTAIN DAISY Nanina never noble Oldcourt Ottowa passed passionate emotion Pietro poor Rosalie rose SAMUEL LOVER 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. 76 - 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 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. 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. 201 - And now, if ye will deal kindly and truly with my master, tell me: and if not, tell me; that 1 may turn to the right hand, or to the left.
Стр. 282 - ... in heaven more brightly than on earth. And the Father presses all the flowers to His heart; but He kisses the flower that pleases him best, and the flower is then endowed with a voice, and can join in the great chorus of praise ! "See" — this is what an angel said, as he carried a dead child up to heaven, and the child heard, as if in a dream, and they went on over the regions of home where the little child had played, and they came through gardens with beautiful flowers — "which of these...
Стр. 286 - I know it," replied the angel; "for I was myself the little sick boy who went upon crutches. I know my flower well." And now the child altogether unclosed his eyes, and gazed into the bright, glorious countenance of the angel ; and at the same moment they found themselves in the Paradise of God, where joy and blessedness for ever dwell. And God folded the dead child to his heart, and he received wings like the other angel, and flew hand in hand with him. And all the flowers, also, God folded to his...
Стр. 49 - Miss Lillywhite, at this last threat of Angelina's, to faint at a Hottentot — should rebuke the maiden with more than ordinary vivacity? The truth is, Miss Lillywhite had been much provoked: even on the previous Sunday, when Angelina had menaced to faint at the clergyman — a very handsome, meek young man, who preached a maiden sermon with great promise of preferment — Miss Lillywhite could only scold the maiden into firmness, by threatening to give her up, unattended, to the care of the beadle.
Стр. 28 - I should say not," replied the tailor's wife, with womanly decision. "And so I found. It is now, madam, ten years ago since I died. If you doubt me, take your way to the cemetery. There, madam, you will see my monument. There's no mistaking it — 'tis such a handsome thing, with work enough in it to have kept the sculptor and his family for a twelvemonth. I am there, ma'am, in alto relievo in four compartments ; and in all four my likeness by lamenting friends is considered very perfect. In one...
Стр. 223 - I dare say you had a good deal of difficulty in making them learn their parts." " Difficulty ? Difficulty is no word for it ! It was absolute martyrdom ! They would not learn ; they would not remember ; and I could never get them all together to rehearse." "But what was the end?" " You shall hear. Finding that some of my actors, who would perform in spite of every thing, had neither memory nor presence of mind, the idea struck me, to tell them, if they found themselves in any difficulty, to say,...
Стр. 25 - Thank you," said the little man ; his face puckered as he spoke, and shifting uneasily, — thank you, but people condemned to live in thimbles are not allowed to be comfortable." Poor creatures ! cried Mrs. Atkins, " it must be a strait lodging, goodness knows. I never heard of such a thing." " Benighted, darkened being ! " cried the little man in black ; " miserable, forlorn person," he continued, as though from a platform, — did you never hear of Solomon's brazen kettles ? " " Never, sir," said...