| 1829 - 306 páginas
...want of attachment and fidelity to me. She declared that she despised his character and his person ; that she had never looked upon him in any other light than as a monster of impiety and ingratitude ; that he was grossly mistaken to think that she had ever wished... | |
| 1884 - 862 páginas
...mirror, and she had the chance of seeming to wipe it out. Oh, surely then be would take the ilint! and it would dawn upon him, that she had never looked...in any other light than that of an acquaintance and neighbor, who might be tile better for a kind word or look. He would comprehend that she had pitied,... | |
| Maurice Auguste comte de Benyowsky - 1898 - 410 páginas
...want of attachment and fidelity to me. She declared that she despised his character and his person ; that she had never looked upon him in any other light than as a monster of impiety and ingratitude ; that he was basely mistaken to think that she had ever wished... | |
| Maurice Auguste comte de Benyowsky - 1904 - 682 páginas
...want of attachment and fidelity to me. She declared that she despised his character and his person ; that she had never looked upon him in any other light than as a monster of impiety and ingratitude ; that he was basely mistaken to think that she had ever wished... | |
| Maurice Auguste comte de Benyowsky - 1904 - 696 páginas
...his want of attachment and fidelity to She deckred that she despised his character and his person ; that she had never looked upon him in any other light than as a monster of impiety and ingratitude ; that he was basely mistaken to think that she had ever wished... | |
| Henry Mills Alden, Frederick Lewis Allen, Lee Foster Hartman, Thomas Bucklin Wells - 1856 - 892 páginas
...affected, or per)\aps felt indignation. "His heart," he said, "was in Florence'sgrave ; and as for Fanny, she had never looked upon him in any other light than that of a brother." Still, he was at the house always, went nowhere else, and seemed to care for no one else.... | |
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