Christmas drift |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 13
Página 10
... present timid lovers - a Rector's daughter , and a farmers ' When the first hour had nearly past in this son . very sectarian style , Mr. Baily made a praiseworthy effort to alter the course of things . First mixing for himself a com ...
... present timid lovers - a Rector's daughter , and a farmers ' When the first hour had nearly past in this son . very sectarian style , Mr. Baily made a praiseworthy effort to alter the course of things . First mixing for himself a com ...
Página 17
... present the little matter of Stella and Vanessa ; and as for Sir Richard Steele , well , he has written a charming little note to his dear wife , Lady Steele , informing her that the business of the " Tatler " will detain him from her ...
... present the little matter of Stella and Vanessa ; and as for Sir Richard Steele , well , he has written a charming little note to his dear wife , Lady Steele , informing her that the business of the " Tatler " will detain him from her ...
Página 18
... present employment through the interest of a printer , one of his poor patients , but he has been introduced to the great Doctor Young , the author of " Night Thonghts , " and now he writes for Mr. John Newberry , of St. Paul's ...
... present employment through the interest of a printer , one of his poor patients , but he has been introduced to the great Doctor Young , the author of " Night Thonghts , " and now he writes for Mr. John Newberry , of St. Paul's ...
Página 20
... present time is the coast which forms the boundary of the noble weald of Sussex . In one part the high cliffs mounted with mossy green turf , rise in ma- jesty , as though saying to the great waters , Thus far shalt thou come , and no ...
... present time is the coast which forms the boundary of the noble weald of Sussex . In one part the high cliffs mounted with mossy green turf , rise in ma- jesty , as though saying to the great waters , Thus far shalt thou come , and no ...
Página 25
... present , the imagin- ative Gothic monk , who nestled himself in re- ligion and art , and stay to gaze upon the wreck of all things holy in the fifteenth century - that blasphemous Renaissance , in which bodiless heads became a ...
... present , the imagin- ative Gothic monk , who nestled himself in re- ligion and art , and stay to gaze upon the wreck of all things holy in the fifteenth century - that blasphemous Renaissance , in which bodiless heads became a ...
Palavras e frases frequentes
Agnes arrived artist Asthma Baily Barton beautiful bells Brighton called carved chime Christ Christmas church Clement Scott cold Court dark dear delight door earth Ellen eyes face father fire Fleet Street flowers ghost going Grinling Gibbons hand happy Harry Harry's haunted houses heard heart holy hope hurried Joe Green John John Evelyn Joseph Wheatly ladies Lane Laura Locock's look Lord Buckhurst Loyyier Ludgate Hill Maggie Maitland ment merry Midshipman Easy mind morning mother never night Oliver Cromwell passed poor pounds rain ring round Samuel Pepys Save the Queen scene seemed singing sisters sleep smile smugglers Somerset House song soon sorrow stood strange sword Tatler tears tell Temple Bar Theophilus Theophilus's things thou thought tion told truth turned village walked week William Shakespeare wind wonder words young
Passagens conhecidas
Página 33 - I THINK, when I read that sweet story of old, When Jesus was here among men, How he called little children, as lambs to his fold, I should like to have been with them then.
Página 7 - And therefore as a stranger give it welcome. There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.
Página 43 - Whom, if we were not very dull, We could not choose but look on still ; Since there is no place so alone, The which He doth not fill.
Página 16 - This world is the best that we live in, To lend, or to spend, or to give in ; But to beg, or to borrow, or get a man's own, 'Tis the very worst world, sir, that ever was known.
Página 15 - Tis a very good world that we live in, To lend, or to spend, or to give in; But to beg, or to borrow, or get a man's own, Tis the very worst world, sir, that ever was known.
Página 19 - Lord! how every body's looks, and discourse in the street, is of death, and nothing else; and few people going up and down, that the town is like a place distressed and forsaken.