Reginald Dalton, Volume 1E. Duyckinck, 1823 |
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Página 30
... Oxford - ay , and that the very next Michaelmas . Why , if you stay here much longer , you'll stuff your head so full of these meres and mountains , that you'll never be a man for the world while you exist . I wager you end in a son ...
... Oxford - ay , and that the very next Michaelmas . Why , if you stay here much longer , you'll stuff your head so full of these meres and mountains , that you'll never be a man for the world while you exist . I wager you end in a son ...
Página 45
... Oxford . John , having taken his degree with some eclat , ob- ained , through the kindness of a young gentleman ucated at the same college with himself , the small benefice of Lannwell , where , as we have seen ROOK 1. - CHAP . VIII ...
... Oxford . John , having taken his degree with some eclat , ob- ained , through the kindness of a young gentleman ucated at the same college with himself , the small benefice of Lannwell , where , as we have seen ROOK 1. - CHAP . VIII ...
Página 56
... Oxford . It is a sore thing for me to lose you , but the time is come . Perhaps we should have been thinking of it sooner . " Much as Reginald had thought of - much as he had even desired what was now proposed , there was a me- lancholy ...
... Oxford . It is a sore thing for me to lose you , but the time is come . Perhaps we should have been thinking of it sooner . " Much as Reginald had thought of - much as he had even desired what was now proposed , there was a me- lancholy ...
Página 67
... Oxford in these days , Mr. Frederick ? " Frederick hereupon began to talk of vintages and so forth , with an air of understanding that was far from being over and above pleasing to the Vicar , whose son was just about to commence his ...
... Oxford in these days , Mr. Frederick ? " Frederick hereupon began to talk of vintages and so forth , with an air of understanding that was far from being over and above pleasing to the Vicar , whose son was just about to commence his ...
Página 78
... Oxford- Will you treat me like a friend indeed , and not hurt . me by refusing to accept of this small mark of my good - will -- my affection for you both ? " 66 With this Miss Betty lifted a letter from the table by her side , broke ...
... Oxford- Will you treat me like a friend indeed , and not hurt . me by refusing to accept of this small mark of my good - will -- my affection for you both ? " 66 With this Miss Betty lifted a letter from the table by her side , broke ...
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Palavras e frases frequentes
acquainted amidst beautiful better Betty bless blush Bowdler Brank brother chair Charwell cheek choly College course cousin cried dear dear boy dinner district of England door Elizabeth Ellen Hesketh ere long eyes father feelings fellow Frederick Chisney Fulda ginald gown Grypherwast Grypherwast-hall hand happy head hear heard heart honour hope hour John John Dalton Keith kind Lannwell lassie living look Lord Lucy ma'am Macdonald melan merry England mild ale mind Miss Dalton Miss Hesketh morning nald never old gentleman once Oxford pardon paused perhaps poor Priest quoth Ralph Macdonald Reginald Dalton Rhine Richard Dalton scarcely scene seemed Sir Charles Catline sister smile soon sort speak Squire stood sure Teddy Theed there's thing Thorwold thought Tom Smith tone truth Vicar voice walk Whig whisper Witham words young friend youth
Passagens conhecidas
Página 83 - She was a Phantom of delight When first she gleamed upon my sight; A lovely Apparition , sent To be a moment's ornament; Her eyes as stars of Twilight fair; Like Twilight's, too, her dusky hair; But all things else about her drawn From May-time and the cheerful Dawn ; A dancing Shape, an Image gay, To haunt, to startle, and waylay.
Página 84 - A countenance in which did meet Sweet records, promises as sweet; A creature not too bright or good For human nature's daily food: For transient sorrows, simple wiles, Praise, blame, love, kisses, tears, and smiles.
Página 155 - Clement's parish, the war still lingered in fragments, and was renewed at intervals. " Reginald, although a nimble and active young fellow, broad in the chest, narrow in the pelvis, thick in the neck, and lightsome in the region of the breadbasket, a good leaper, and a runner among ten thousand, was not, as has been formerly mentioned, a fencer; neither was he a wrestler, nor a boxer, nor an expert hand at the baton. These were accomplishments, of which, his education having, according to Mr Macdonald's...
Página 15 - Tis one of those who needs must leave the path Of the world's business to go wild alone: His arms have a perpetual holiday ; The happy man will creep about the fields, Following his fancies by the hour, to bring Tears down his cheek, or solitary smiles Into his face, until the setting sun Write fool upon his forehead.
Página 152 - In short, by this time the Highstreet of Oxford exhibited a scene as different from its customary solemnity and silence, as it is possible to imagine. Conceive several hundreds of young men in caps, or gowns, or both, but all of them, without exception, wearing some part of their academical insignia, retreating before a band rather more numerous, made up of. apprentices, journeymen, labourers, bargemen — a motley mixture of every thing that, in the phrase of that classical region, passes under...
Página 137 - There were the waves trampling, trampling towards us, whichever way we turned our horses' heads, and the mist was all this while thickening more and more ; and if a great cloud of it was dashed away now and then with the wind, why, sirs, the prospect was but the more rueful, for the sea was round us every way. Wide and far we could see nothing but the black water, and the waves leaping up here and there upon the sand-banks. " ' Well, sir, the poor dumb horses, they backed of themselves as the waters...
Página 244 - hear me, Mr. Dalton. We are both too young — we are both inexperienced — and we have both our sorrows, and we should both think of other things. Go, sir, and do your duty in the world ; and if it will lighten your heart to know, that you carry with you my warmest wishes for your welfare, do take them with you. Hereafter there may come better days for us both, and then perhaps — but no, no, sir, I know 'tis folly ' " She bowed her head upon her knees — he drew her hand to his lips, and kissed...