Wallace: A Franconia StoryHarper, 1850 - 203 páginas A young girl and her brother spend the summer holidays in upstate New York with their aunt and cousins. |
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Página 10
... CAROLINE , a young lady residing in the village ; thirteen years old . MARY BELL , her friend , residing at a little distance from the village , with her mother ; twelve years old . PARKER , a village boy . WALLACE Wallace . WA CHAPTER ...
... CAROLINE , a young lady residing in the village ; thirteen years old . MARY BELL , her friend , residing at a little distance from the village , with her mother ; twelve years old . PARKER , a village boy . WALLACE Wallace . WA CHAPTER ...
Página 36
... Caroline , because they are older than the rest . " " I'll write one for Mary Bell , " said Wallace , " but you must get somebody else to write one for Caroline . " So Wallace took out a sheet of small note- paper , from a little ...
... Caroline , because they are older than the rest . " " I'll write one for Mary Bell , " said Wallace , " but you must get somebody else to write one for Caroline . " So Wallace took out a sheet of small note- paper , from a little ...
Página 37
... Caroline , perhaps ; and he can put a much prettier picture in it , than I have put in Mary Bell's . " " Well , " said Phonny , turning to Malleville , " let us go and ask Beechnut . ” Phonny was going to take Mary Bell's in- vitation ...
... Caroline , perhaps ; and he can put a much prettier picture in it , than I have put in Mary Bell's . " " Well , " said Phonny , turning to Malleville , " let us go and ask Beechnut . ” Phonny was going to take Mary Bell's in- vitation ...
Página 41
... Caroline's home was in a large and handsome house in the village . Mary Bell , on the other hand , lived in a small but very pleasant farm- house , up the glen . Caroline's father was a man of business . He had a large family , and he ...
... Caroline's home was in a large and handsome house in the village . Mary Bell , on the other hand , lived in a small but very pleasant farm- house , up the glen . Caroline's father was a man of business . He had a large family , and he ...
Página 42
... Caroline and Mary Bell , there were various other girls to be invited . These others lived in different places in the village and along the road . Phonny had taken the precaution to make a list of them , with the names arranged in the ...
... Caroline and Mary Bell , there were various other girls to be invited . These others lived in different places in the village and along the road . Phonny had taken the precaution to make a list of them , with the names arranged in the ...
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Palavras e frases frequentes
accident afraid Antoine asked Phonny Augusta balcony basket beautiful Beech began Bell's blueberries boat bonnet boys bridge Bunnianne called Caroline Caroline's carpet-bag carry court-martial crew door drawing encampment fastened father ferryman fire flageolet forbidden flowers Franconia garden gave Gibraltar girls give Golf Grand excursion Grey gunwale half Calf Henry's inkstand invitation Julius Cæsar lamp closet looked Malleville's Mary Bell mother Muslin oakum oars oarsmen pails paper Parker party path Phon Phonny and Malleville Phonny's picture pleasant pond precipice pretty proposed queen ready replied Beechnut replied Wallace rest rocks sail Sarah saying seats shore side sing sitting song stone stopped story sugar summer-house tall fir tell tent thing thought tion tired told took trees trunk turned village walk Wallace's window wish write yard
Passagens conhecidas
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Página 6 - Congress, in the year one thousand eight hundred and fifty-five, by HARPER & BROTHERS, In the Clerk's Office for the Southern District of New York.
Página 8 - ... to feed it, while in the latter case, nearly every one will just as certainly look for a stone. Thus the growing up in the right atmosphere, rather than the receiving of the right instruction, is the condition which it is most important to secure, in plans for forming the characters of children. It is in accordance with this philosophy that these stories, though written mainly with a view to their moral influence on the hearts and dispositions of the readers, contain very little formal exhortation...
Página 7 - The development of the moral sentiments in the human heart, in early life, — and everything in fact which relates to the formation of character, — is determined in a far greater degree by sympathy, and by the influence of example, than by formal precepts and didactic instruction.