Patronage, 第 3 卷J. Johnson&Company, 1814 |
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共有 37 个结果,这是第 1-5 个
第5页
... hear . You know , Georgiana , Buckhurst told us , that when they had something to live upon they never lived like other people , but always were buried alive in the country ; and Lady Jane Granville , with her own lips , told me , that ...
... hear . You know , Georgiana , Buckhurst told us , that when they had something to live upon they never lived like other people , but always were buried alive in the country ; and Lady Jane Granville , with her own lips , told me , that ...
第18页
... hear what it might be " awkward for her to hear , " considering her intimacy with Sir Robert Percy . She began talking to an old lady about her late illness , of which she longed to hear from her own lips all the partieulars ; and ...
... hear what it might be " awkward for her to hear , " considering her intimacy with Sir Robert Percy . She began talking to an old lady about her late illness , of which she longed to hear from her own lips all the partieulars ; and ...
第19页
... hear every thing that was said by Count Altenberg , and not to lose a word that was uttered by Caroline . Mrs. Falconer was parti- cularly anxious to know what would be said about the picture in the gallery at Percy - Hall , with which ...
... hear every thing that was said by Count Altenberg , and not to lose a word that was uttered by Caroline . Mrs. Falconer was parti- cularly anxious to know what would be said about the picture in the gallery at Percy - Hall , with which ...
第21页
... hears all this ! " Yes all this confirmed , by the testi- mony of their equals in rank , the favor- able ideas he had first received of the Percys from their inferiors and depend . ants . Every person who spoke to , or of Caroline and ...
... hears all this ! " Yes all this confirmed , by the testi- mony of their equals in rank , the favor- able ideas he had first received of the Percys from their inferiors and depend . ants . Every person who spoke to , or of Caroline and ...
第55页
... hear more of Count Altenberg . Her father and mother were still more anxious on this subject , they both agreed in think . ing , that , as far as they had yet seen , Count Altenberg was a person suited to Caroline , in every respect a ...
... hear more of Count Altenberg . Her father and mother were still more anxious on this subject , they both agreed in think . ing , that , as far as they had yet seen , Count Altenberg was a person suited to Caroline , in every respect a ...
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常见术语和短语
admiration appeared beauty brother Buckhurst Caro Caroline's character charmed Clay-Hall Colonel Hauton Commissioner Falconer coner conversation Count Alten Count Altenberg countenance cried Lady dance daugh daughter dear Lady delicacy dress English Clay eyes Falconer's fashionable father favor feel felt fortune French Clay gentleman give gout Gresham happy hear heard heart honor hope Hungerford James Harcourt knew Lady Angelica Lady Anne Lady Frances Arlington Lady Jane Granville Lady Kew Lady Trant lady's Ladyship letter look Lord Old Lord Oldborough Lordship Lydia Ma'am manner marriage marry ment mind Miss Caroline Percy Miss Falconer Miss Georgiana Falconer Miss Percy mother never observed Panton passion Percy family Percy's Petcalf pleasure racter recollect Rosamond Sir Robert Percy sister smiling spoke sure taste tell Temple tenberg thing thought tion turned voice wish woman word young lady Zara Zara's
热门引用章节
第126页 - From wandering on a foreign strand ? If such there breathe, go mark him well : For him no minstrel raptures swell ; High though his titles, proud his name, Boundless his wealth as wish can claim ; Despite those titles, power and pelf, The wretch, concentred all in self, Living, shall forfeit fair renown, And, doubly dying, shall go down To the vile dust, from whence he sprung, Unwept, unhonored and unsung.
第126页 - BREATHES there the man, with soul so dead, Who never to himself hath said, This is my own, my native land ! Whose heart hath ne'er within him burn'd, As home his footsteps he hath turn'd, From wandering on a foreign strand...
第321页 - Sidney, in a letter to his son, says, that in the whole of his life he never knew one man, of what condition soever, arrive at any degree of reputation in the world, who made choice of, or delighted in the company or conversation of those, who in their qualities were inferior, or in their parts not much superior to himself.