The Lovels of Arden: A NovelHarper, 1872 - 179 strán (strany) |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 52.
Strana 7
... happy as a girl's reveries should be - she told herself that her fa- ther must come to love her in time . She was ready to love him so much on her part ; to be so devoted , faithful , and obedient ; to bear so much from him if need were ...
... happy as a girl's reveries should be - she told herself that her fa- ther must come to love her in time . She was ready to love him so much on her part ; to be so devoted , faithful , and obedient ; to bear so much from him if need were ...
Strana 9
... happy to have made your acquaintance , Miss Lovel , " he said ; your fa- ther's family is one of the best and oldest in the North Riding . " After this they talked of many things ; of Clarissa's girlish experiences at Belforêt ; of the ...
... happy to have made your acquaintance , Miss Lovel , " he said ; your fa- ther's family is one of the best and oldest in the North Riding . " After this they talked of many things ; of Clarissa's girlish experiences at Belforêt ; of the ...
Strana 10
... happy because one is young . There has been watching for a smile ever since I first saw your very little happiness in my life yet a while ; only face , and have not surprised one yet ? Be sure the dreary , monotonous routine of boarding ...
... happy because one is young . There has been watching for a smile ever since I first saw your very little happiness in my life yet a while ; only face , and have not surprised one yet ? Be sure the dreary , monotonous routine of boarding ...
Strana 11
... Happy art , to be loved by so fair a votary ! And you dabble with brushes and colors , of course ? " 66 ' A little . " " A true young lady's answer . If you were a Raffaelle in glacé silk and crinoline you would tell me no more than ...
... Happy art , to be loved by so fair a votary ! And you dabble with brushes and colors , of course ? " 66 ' A little . " " A true young lady's answer . If you were a Raffaelle in glacé silk and crinoline you would tell me no more than ...
Strana 17
... happy they had been together ! sometimes wandering for a whole day in the park and woods of Arden , he with his sketching apparatus , she with a vol- ume of Sir Walter Scott , to read aloud to him while he sketched , or to read him to ...
... happy they had been together ! sometimes wandering for a whole day in the park and woods of Arden , he with his sketching apparatus , she with a vol- ume of Sir Walter Scott , to read aloud to him while he sketched , or to read him to ...
Iné vydania - Zobraziť všetky
Časté výrazy a frázy
Arden Court asked Austin Lovel baby beauty better brother Brussels by-and-by charm child Clarissa Lovel Clary course cried croquet Daniel Gran Daniel Granger dare say daugh daughter dinner door doubt dreary dress duty eyes face fancy father feel felt FENTON'S QUEST Fermor fond friends George Fairfax Geraldine Challoner girl glad gone Gran Hale Castle half hand happy heart Holborough hope hour husband Jane Target kind knew Lady Geraldine Laura Armstrong live look maid manner marriage married Mill Cottage mind Miss Granger Miss Lovel mistress model villagers morning mother never night once pale papa Paris perhaps pleasant poor quadrille remembered replied rissa scarcely seemed sigh sister smile Sophia suppose sure talk tell thing thought Tillott tion told walked Warman watch Westleigh wife woman wonder words young lady
Populárne pasáže
Strana 111 - Than that a child, more than all other gifts That earth can offer to declining man, Brings hope with it, and forward-looking thoughts, And stirrings of inquietude, when they By tendency of nature needs must fail.
Strana 91 - And will Mr. Lovel come to live with us ?' ' I don't know ; I have never contemplated such a possibility. I think Mr. Lovel is scarcely the kind of person who would care to live in another man's house.
Strana 143 - Can you read anywise? I think of you, bless you, love you — but it would have been better for you never to have seen my face perhaps, though Mr. Kenyon gave the first leave. Perhaps!! — I ' flatter ' myself to-night, in change for you.
Strana 120 - ... You have not grown indifferent to me ; but I don't want to take you away from home against your wish.' ' My wish is to be anywhere with you, papa ; anywhere — even though you may feel me an incumbrance. I could endure the humiliation of feeling that, so 'long as I was allowed to remain with you.' Mr. Granger gave a sigh that was almost a groan, and, for perhaps the first time in his life, it occurred to him that it would be a pleasant thing if his only daughter were to fall in love with some...
Strana 34 - but you have been so kind already, and I have stayed so long, that I begin to feel myself quite an intruder.' ' You silly child ! I do really, really wish to have you. I should like to keep you with me always, if I could. You suit me so much better than any of my sisters ; they are the most provoking girls in the world, I think, for being uninterested in my pursuits. And your Italian is something wonderful. I have not opened my dictionary since we have been reading together. And beyond all that,...
Strana 23 - ... criticisms, which in the end are scarcely more than moral strictures. With Catullus, the fact of adultery must be accepted. To defend it on moral grounds is worse than useless; to attack it on those grounds is to disseminate prejudice and misunderstanding. In the end, Catullus is not the first nor the last man in the world to fall in love with a married woman; it is a common, and tragic, experience, in this day as in that. That Catullus felt himself privileged to carry that love to the point...