Charlemont: Or, The Pride of the Village. A Tale of KentuckyBelford, Clarke, 1885 - 447 頁 |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 33 筆
第 15 頁
... with a sky that never knew a cloud , the sweet homes and secure possessions of the unwarlike . The fierce robber sometimes smote the peaceful traveller upon the highway , and the wily assassin of reputation , within THE SCENE . 15.
... with a sky that never knew a cloud , the sweet homes and secure possessions of the unwarlike . The fierce robber sometimes smote the peaceful traveller upon the highway , and the wily assassin of reputation , within THE SCENE . 15.
第 18 頁
... , and silence dwells lonely among the ruins , the only inhabitant of the place It has no longer a human occupant . " Something ails it now — the spot is cursed . " - - Why this fate has fallen upon so sweet 18 CHARLEMONT .
... , and silence dwells lonely among the ruins , the only inhabitant of the place It has no longer a human occupant . " Something ails it now — the spot is cursed . " - - Why this fate has fallen upon so sweet 18 CHARLEMONT .
第 19 頁
... sweet an abiding place— why the villagers should have deserted a spot , so quiet and so beautiful it does not fall within our present purpose to inquire . It was most probably abandoned - not because of the unfruitfulness of the soil ...
... sweet an abiding place— why the villagers should have deserted a spot , so quiet and so beautiful it does not fall within our present purpose to inquire . It was most probably abandoned - not because of the unfruitfulness of the soil ...
第 20 頁
... sweet , and the fear is strong that the cottagers of Charlemont , in the weary hours , when life's winter is ap proaching , will still and vainly sigh after the once - despised enjoyments of their deserted hamlet . It was toward the ...
... sweet , and the fear is strong that the cottagers of Charlemont , in the weary hours , when life's winter is ap proaching , will still and vainly sigh after the once - despised enjoyments of their deserted hamlet . It was toward the ...
第 25 頁
... sweet little cottages at its foot . An interchange of courte- sies between the travellers and the villagers whose pres- ence had given occasion to some portion of the previous dialogue , in which the manner of the younger traveller was ...
... sweet little cottages at its foot . An interchange of courte- sies between the travellers and the villagers whose pres- ence had given occasion to some portion of the previous dialogue , in which the manner of the younger traveller was ...
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常見字詞
Alfred Stevens beauty beheld believe better Bill Hinkley blessed bosom Brother Cross Brother Stevens Calvert Charlemont cheeks companion counsel cousin damsel danger dear doubt ears Ellisland equally exclaimed expression eyes fancy father fear feel felt fiddle fight garet girl give glance gran'pa hand hear heart hills hope Joe Richards Johannes Secundus John Cross Kentucky knew lence less lick lips look maiden Margaret Cooper mind moral mother natural Ned Hinkley never old Hinkley once passion perhaps person Peter Cummins pistols pray preacher pride replied rock scarcely scorn seemed seen shame sight Sister Cooper smile soon sort soul speak spect spirit spoke stranger strength subdued suffer sure sweet tell Thackeray thee there's things thou thought tion truth uncle utterance vanity village voice Warham widow William Hinkley woman words worthy young youth
熱門章節
第 297 頁 - Their port was more than human as they stood: I took it for a faery vision Of some gay creatures of the element, That in the colors of the rainbow live, And play in the plighted clouds.
第 10 頁 - While others, relying on their own partial vision, are full of groundless terrors and alarms — —hesitating, faltering, staggering, bewildered — he is far in advance, and still making perceptible way; having but one only rule for his guidance : to turn neither to the right hand nor to the left, but to press «ver forwards towards the prize of his high calling in Christ Jesus.
第 270 頁 - Shame! shame! you bloody-minded man," she cried, "to slaughter your own son, your only son to come behind him and knock him down with a club as if he had been an inhuman ox! You are no husband of mine. He shan't own you for a father. If I had the pick, I'd choose a thousand fathers for him, from here to Massassippi, sooner than you.
第 337 頁 - Love! in such a wilderness as this, Where transport and security entwine, Here is the empire of thy perfect bliss, And here thou art a god indeed divine.
第 8 頁 - ... The reflections which will be most likely to arise from the perusal of such a history, lead us to a consideration of the social characteristics of the time and region, and to a consideration of the facility with which access to society is afforded by the manners and habits of our forest population. It is in all newly-settled countries, as among the rustic population of most nations, that the absence of the compensative resources of wealth leads to a singular and unreserved freedom among the people.
第 430 頁 - ... in Tennessee; for I watched with an hawk's eye for him. Now, our design, when we attempted to lure Col. Sharp to Retirement, was for Miss Cooke, with her own hand, to shoot him. I did not like that. But she was inflexible; and I had learned her to fire my pistols, she had practiced with them, till she could place a ball, with an accuracy, which, were it universally equaled, by our modern duelists, would render the practice of dueling, much more fatal than it is frequently seen to be of late....
第 242 頁 - ... distant plain, — much as I love these spots upon which our ancestors have been bred and born ; yet it shall not be said that I have been the cause of the ruin of our tribe. I am, therefore, for immediate departure: delay now would be dangerous. In two more days we shall be visited by the Pasha's troops, who will take from us hostages, and then here shall we be fixed, and here will ruin overwhelm us. Let us go, my children ; God is great and merciful.
第 292 頁 - ... to be our bane ; while the hardship and suffering, whose approach we deprecate in sackcloth and ashes, may come with healing on their wings, and afford us a dearer blessing than any ever yet depicted in the loom of a sanguine and brilliant imagination. We are, after all, humbling as this fact may be to our clamorous vanity, only so many agents and instruments, blind, and scuffling vainly in our blindness, in the perpetual law of progress. As a soul never dies, so it is never useless or unemployed....
第 11 頁 - strong-minded women," even more certainly than when the portrait was first taken, the identity of the sketch with its original will be sure of recognition. Her character and career will illustrate most .of the mistakes which are made by that ambitious class, among the gentler sex, who are now seeking so earnestly to pass out from that province of humiliation to which the sex has been circumscribed from the first moment of recorded history. What she will gain by the motion, if successful, might...