Friendship's Offering, Volume 7Phillips and Sampson, 1847 |
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Página 14
... night , annoyed by the small hammer of the death- watch beetle , measuring the march of time in tones almost identical with those which fail to call attention ? The practised ear , which heeds not the thunder of com- mercial wheels in ...
... night , annoyed by the small hammer of the death- watch beetle , measuring the march of time in tones almost identical with those which fail to call attention ? The practised ear , which heeds not the thunder of com- mercial wheels in ...
Página 25
... night . Have we not said enough ? Youth , sympathy , and close association rarely vary in their consequences . They loved and when did the young lover pause to analyze the fitness of circumstances ? The Count well knew the history of ...
... night . Have we not said enough ? Youth , sympathy , and close association rarely vary in their consequences . They loved and when did the young lover pause to analyze the fitness of circumstances ? The Count well knew the history of ...
Página 49
... night . It engendered a settled convic- tion that a fearful fate awaited her at the moment when her happiness should be about to reach its consumma- tion ; but how could she destroy the peace of a parent whom she reverenced , or the ...
... night . It engendered a settled convic- tion that a fearful fate awaited her at the moment when her happiness should be about to reach its consumma- tion ; but how could she destroy the peace of a parent whom she reverenced , or the ...
Página 58
... night before ; shirking friends whom he was just wishing to stumble on , and stumbling on proctors whom he was just wish- ing to shirk . These , however , were venial errors ; and unattended with serious consequences . His unfortunate ...
... night before ; shirking friends whom he was just wishing to stumble on , and stumbling on proctors whom he was just wish- ing to shirk . These , however , were venial errors ; and unattended with serious consequences . His unfortunate ...
Página 59
... night ; sunset divides the sky with her . " First it would tell us of the before - breakfast stroll of some fair creature just budding into beauty , at that pe- riod which is contemptuously called the " bread and butter age ; " but ...
... night ; sunset divides the sky with her . " First it would tell us of the before - breakfast stroll of some fair creature just budding into beauty , at that pe- riod which is contemptuously called the " bread and butter age ; " but ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Palavras e frases frequentes
able danger admiration Amalie Anina appeared arms Astrologer Barante baron bassador beauty bosom bride brother Carolina Castelli castle charms cheek child Count Calderone countenance Countess court dark daughter Domenico door dress Duc de Longueville Duc de Valois Duke Emily exclaimed eyes fading records fate father fear feelings fell Francis French gazed George Lagrange Giovanni girl glance hand happiness head heard heart hill honour hope hour husband Italian king La Carolina Lady Adela laugh Leonard lips look lord lover Maria marriage married Mary Mary of England Medina Sidonia melan Milan monk Mordaunt mother mountain nature never night noble passed passion pause person Pietro poor present Princess replied Rocca Giovane round Santa Chiara Sartain seemed sister smile soul spirit stood Suffolk tabaro tell thee thing thou thought tion tone turned Valentine's day Velletri Vinci voice wife words young youth
Passagens conhecidas
Página 134 - ... assured us of what in that country needs no assurance, fine weather for the morrow. We set out early in the morning to avoid the heats, breakfasted at Albano, and till ten o'clock passed our time in visiting the Mosaic, the villa of Cicero, and other curiosities of the place. We reposed during the middle of the day in a tent elevated for us at the hill top, whence we looked on the hill-embosomed lake, and the distant eminence crowned by a town with its church. Other villages and cottages were...
Página 153 - ... the furniture; and the leaves of Indian corn, heaped high in one corner, served, it seemed, for a bed, for a man lay on it, his head buried in his folded arms. Anina looked round on her savage hosts: their countenances expressed every variety of brutal ferocity, now rendered more dreadful from gaunt famine and suffering. "O there is none who will save me!
Página 134 - ... weather for the morrow. We set out early in the morning to avoid the heats, breakfasted at Albano, and till ten o'clock passed our time in visiting the Mosaic, the villa of Cicero, and other curiosities of the place. We reposed during the middle of the day in a tent elevated for us at the hill top, whence we looked on the hill-embosomed lake, and the distant eminence crowned by a town with its church. Other villages and cottages were scattered among the foldings of mountains, and beyond we saw...
Página 147 - Do you remain, rny father," she said ; " I will go. My holy character will awe these men, my tears move them ; trust me, I swear that I will save my sister." Andrea yielded to her superior courage and energy. The nuns of Santa Chiara when out of their convent do not usually wear their monastic habit, but dress simply in a black gown. Maria, however, had brought her nun's habiliments with her, and thinking thus to impress the soldiers with respect, she now put it on.
Página 61 - Between the acting of a dreadful thing And the first motion, all the interim is Like a phantasma, or a hideous dream : The genius, and the mortal instruments, Are then in council; and the state of man, Like to a little kingdom, suffers then The nature of an insurrection.
Página 151 - Anina stood by, weeping and helpless, hardly hearing her sister's injunctions to return speedily to their father, and under his guidance to seek sanctuary. The guard now opened the door. Anina clung to her sister in terror, while she, in soothing tones, entreated her to calm herself. The soldier said they must delay no longer, for the priest had arrived to confess the prisoner. To Anina the idea of confession associated with death was terrible ; to Maria it brought hope. She whispered in a smothered...
Página 255 - With lofty, clear, and polish'd mind • But Dora, rich in mental grace, Alas! is somewhat poor in face ; Pity her noble soul don't warm, A Grecian statue's perfect form' But, Anne, in thee all charms combine; Each gift of beauty, sweet, is thine!
Página 140 - ... now that he loved Anina these names were the stings of an adder to pierce his soul. He would have fled from his comrades to a far country, but Anina dwelt amid their very haunts. At this period also, the police established by the French government, which then possessed Rome, made these bands more alive to the conduct of their members, and rumours of active measures to be taken against those who occupied the hills near Albano, Nemi, and Velletri, caused them to draw together in tighter bonds....
Página 146 - She had fainted; the company broke up, and she was left to her sister's care. When the poor child came to herself she was fully aware of her situation, and said nothing, except expressing a wish to retire to rest. Maria was in high spirits at the prospect of her long holiday at home, but the illness of her sister made her refrain from talking that night, and blessing her, as she said good night, she soon slept. Domenico starving! — Domenico trying to escape and dying through hunger, was the vision...
Página 135 - ... gold. The domes and turrets of the far town flashed and gleamed, the trees were dyed in splendour ; two or three slight clouds, which had drunk the radiance till it became their essence, floated golden islets in the lustrous empyrean. The waters, reflecting the brilliancy of the sky and the fire-tinted banks, beamed a second heaven, a second irradiated earth, at our feet. The Mediterranean, gazing on the sun — as the eyes of a mortal bride fail and are dimmed when reflecting her lover's glances...