Blackwood's Lady's Magazine and Gazette of the Fashionable World, Or, St. James's Court-register of Belles Lettres, Fine Arts, Music, Drama, Fashions, &c, Volumes 36-37A.H. Blackwood, G. Simpkin, and J. Page, 1854 |
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Página 18
... offer sacrifices to Janus . These were called Aganolia , a word of which the etymology is extremely dubious . The sacrifices consisted of a goat and incense in later times : but we are informed that in early ages , no animals were ...
... offer sacrifices to Janus . These were called Aganolia , a word of which the etymology is extremely dubious . The sacrifices consisted of a goat and incense in later times : but we are informed that in early ages , no animals were ...
Página 19
... offering of swift horses . Diana , the goddess of hunting , had a weakness for a stag ; and lastly , the birds were not safe , for they were suspected of using their gifts of warbling and chirrupping to reveal the conversations and ...
... offering of swift horses . Diana , the goddess of hunting , had a weakness for a stag ; and lastly , the birds were not safe , for they were suspected of using their gifts of warbling and chirrupping to reveal the conversations and ...
Página 27
... offer so much inducement to singers to retain the air . Chime Again , Chime Again , Beautiful Bells ! Cocks and Co. , New Burlington Street . - A very unique morceau by a young lady quitting the shores of her native land on hearing the ...
... offer so much inducement to singers to retain the air . Chime Again , Chime Again , Beautiful Bells ! Cocks and Co. , New Burlington Street . - A very unique morceau by a young lady quitting the shores of her native land on hearing the ...
Página 43
... offer a sacrifice to the gods , in the hope of thereby propitiating some one of them in favour of his designs . In this he succeeeded ; for the deity Proteus was ungallant enough to inform him of a meens of securing the person of the ...
... offer a sacrifice to the gods , in the hope of thereby propitiating some one of them in favour of his designs . In this he succeeeded ; for the deity Proteus was ungallant enough to inform him of a meens of securing the person of the ...
Página 46
... offering a word in his own defence , and without another croak heard his sentence pronounced - that he and his race should never taste a drop of water during the time that the figs were unripe on the trees . As a perpetual memorial of ...
... offering a word in his own defence , and without another croak heard his sentence pronounced - that he and his race should never taste a drop of water during the time that the figs were unripe on the trees . As a perpetual memorial of ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Blackwood's Lady's Magazine and Gazette of the Fashionable World ..., Volume 2 Visualização integral - 1837 |
Blackwood's Lady's Magazine and Gazette of the Fashionable ..., Volumes 1-27 Visualização integral - 1836 |
Blackwood's Lady's Magazine and Gazette of the Fashionable ..., Volumes 38-39 Visualização integral - 1855 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
admirably appeared Barthélemi basque beautiful Blackheath BON TON Journal carriage Ceres Changeable charms Clara colour corsage Crystal Palace daugh daughter delight dress DUCHESS OF KENT Egerton elegant Elmsdale English exclaimed eyes Fair father favour favourite feel flounces flowers guipure hand happy heart heaven Honiton lace honour horse hour Jane Julia Jupiter lace lady LADY'S MAGAZINE lake leave lips look Louisa Maurice Méline Miss Danvers Monrose month morning mother N. S. VOL never night once ornamented Ovid palace Parsee passed Peleus pretty Prince Albert Quadrille Rain Raymond replied returned ribbon round Royal SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY scene seen side silk Sims Reeves sister sleeves smile song spirit Stratford streets SUNDAY MONDAY sweet tears thee Theresina thou thought town trimmed velvet WEDNESDAY THURSDAY whilst wife William words young
Passagens conhecidas
Página 200 - Wednesday 15 Thursday 16 Friday 17 Saturday 18 SUNDAY 19 Monday 20 Tuesday 21 Wednesday 22 Thursday 23 Friday 24 Saturday 25 SUNDAY 26 Monday 27 Tuesday 28 Wednesday...
Página 38 - To divert, at any time, a troublesome fancy, run to thy BOOKS. They presently fix thee to them, and drive the other out of thy thoughts. They always receive thee with the same kindness.
Página 66 - Particularly with a tiresome friend : Sweet is old wine in bottles, ale in barrels ; Dear is the helpless creature we defend Against the world ; and dear the schoolboy spot We ne'er forget, though there we are forgot. ,' cxxvn But sweeter still than .this, than these, than all, Is first and passionate Love — it stands alone, Like Adam's recollection of his fall...
Página 65 - The wild flowers who will stoop to number? A few can touch the magic string, And noisy Fame is proud to win them; — Alas for those who never sing, But die with all their music in them! Nay, grieve not for the dead alone Whose song has told their hearts' sad story, — Weep for the voiceless, who have known The cross without the crown of glory!
Página 208 - I had got round at low water with my uncles not a great many days before, and we both inferred, that if we but succeeded in getting round now, it would be quite a pleasure to wait among the caves inside until such time as the fall of the tide should lay bare a passage for our return. A...
Página 54 - Oh, Love! what is it in this world of ours Which makes it fatal to be loved? Ah why With cypress branches hast thou wreathed thy bowers, And made thy best interpreter a sigh?
Página 210 - ... brown, and from sombre brown to doleful black. And we could now at least hear what they portended, though we could no longer see. The rising wind began to howl mournfully amid the cliffs, and the sea, hitherto so silent, to beat heavily against the shore, and to boom, like distress-guns, from the recesses of the two deep-sea caves. We could hear, too, the beating rain, now heavier, now lighter, as the gusts swelled or sank ; and the intermittent patter of the streamlet over the deeper cave, now...
Página 208 - It was on a pleasant spring morning that, with my little curious friend beside me, I stood on the beach opposite the eastern promontory, that, with its stern granitic wall, bars access for ten days out of every fourteen to the wonders of the Doocot ; and saw it stretching provokingly out into the green water.
Página 209 - ... from the uplands and the opposite land, and disappeared amid the gloom of their caves; every creature that had wings made use of them in speeding homewards; but neither my companion nor myself had any ; and there was no possibility of getting home without them.
Página 211 - ... over the rough slippery crags, to ascertain whether the tide had not fallen sufficiently far to yield us a passage, but we found the waves chafing among the rocks, just where the tideline had rested twelve hours before, and a full fathom of sea enclasping the base of the promontory.