Tales of to-dayC. Chapple, 1816 - 1046 頁 |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 100 筆
第 329 頁
... coachman , were all the attend- ants she retained , and with this compara- tively insignificant suite , did she travel towards the seat of her ancestors . The journey was performed in safety , and the close of a gloomy evening brought ...
... coachman , were all the attend- ants she retained , and with this compara- tively insignificant suite , did she travel towards the seat of her ancestors . The journey was performed in safety , and the close of a gloomy evening brought ...
第 81 頁
... coachman , coming to the window , asked the young lady whether da va the part of the road that she mean ? " I am an entire stranger here , " she ab- swered , " but I wish to be set down as near to Harvey Lodge as possible * " That gate ...
... coachman , coming to the window , asked the young lady whether da va the part of the road that she mean ? " I am an entire stranger here , " she ab- swered , " but I wish to be set down as near to Harvey Lodge as possible * " That gate ...
第 155 頁
... , the nearest market town . She returned in about two hours , and said she had only been to buy a ball for Tom , because she had lost his , by throwing it at a stage- coachman the day before , as he drove along the JULIET . 155.
... , the nearest market town . She returned in about two hours , and said she had only been to buy a ball for Tom , because she had lost his , by throwing it at a stage- coachman the day before , as he drove along the JULIET . 155.
第 156 頁
Mrs. Isaacs. coachman the day before , as he drove along the road , for clanging his whip at her , and calling her a tomboy . Juliet forbore , for the present , to re- monstrate ; and when Mr. Hobbleton re- turned to supper , she ...
Mrs. Isaacs. coachman the day before , as he drove along the road , for clanging his whip at her , and calling her a tomboy . Juliet forbore , for the present , to re- monstrate ; and when Mr. Hobbleton re- turned to supper , she ...
第 277 頁
... . Harrowby's carriage , attended by one servant . A few miles from town the coachman , suddenly stopping , said , that one of the horses was ill ; but as it was only what he was sub- " ject to , he would soon be better , JULIET . 277.
... . Harrowby's carriage , attended by one servant . A few miles from town the coachman , suddenly stopping , said , that one of the horses was ill ; but as it was only what he was sub- " ject to , he would soon be better , JULIET . 277.
常見字詞
Adelaide ascended the carriage awaited the recovery awaiting their arrival better then take Captain Hardington chaise Cler mont's servants Clermont was awaiting Clermont's equipage waiting Clermont's general dinner coachman to hasten coachman whipped daugh dear dinner hour distance was greater Edmond Eloisa Fitz-Arthur footman going Harriet Harrowby heart Helen hope house at Henwood Juliet consoled Juliet recol Juliet requested Juliet thought Lady Clara Lady Evelina Lady Harcourt Ladyship lected looked Lord Avonmore Lydia memorable visit mind Miss Monteith Miss Riversdale mistress's house Mount Conrad patience was exhaused plain elegant chariot point of stopping prehensive of keeping proceeded pursued Ly quietly awaited reach home reach Hounslow reach Wind requested the coachman rest a short road Rosalba Rushdale servants who attended sick horse Sir Edmund soon be better stopping the carriage stranger swered take a post take a post-chaise tempted to adopt think the distance tion velocity that Juliet wish young
熱門章節
第 240 頁 - How sweet the moonlight sleeps upon this bank ! Here will we sit and let the sounds of music Creep in our ears; soft stillness and the night Become the touches of sweet harmony.
第 165 頁 - Tis beauty truly blent, whose red and white Nature's own sweet and cunning hand laid on...
第 134 頁 - By a grey mountain-stream ; just elevate Above the winter torrents did it stand, Upon a craggy bank ; an orchard slope Arose behind, and joyous was the scene In early summer, when those antic trees Shone with their blushing blossoms, and the flax Twinkled beneath the breeze its liveliest green. But, save the flax-field and that orchard slope, All else was desolate, and now...
第 58 頁 - Rue, who long ago exhibited sufficient evidence of his being well qualified for such an undertaking. § Of the language spoken by the great body of the people about a century after the conquest, the reader may in some degree, be enabled to judge, from the following specimen of Lyamond's translation of Wace's Brut d1 Angleterre.
第 16 頁 - OF naturally of a delicate constitution ; and the shock which she had received from the death of her friend Lady Riversdale, had contributed to aid the ravages of a rapid decline.