Rothelan: A Romance of the English Histories, Volumen3Oliver & Boyd, 1824 |
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Página 27
... fortunes on a bench in the pleasants adjoining their house . " It was , " says he , " in that season when the earth blithely shows her broad apron filled with the gifts of Heaven , and the obse- quious trees hold out their hands to the ...
... fortunes on a bench in the pleasants adjoining their house . " It was , " says he , " in that season when the earth blithely shows her broad apron filled with the gifts of Heaven , and the obse- quious trees hold out their hands to the ...
Página 28
... . The uncertainty of his hopes - the bar that fortune had placed between him and the Lady Blanche in his questioned birth- his mother's melancholy , and the little chance that was then in the time , of any warlike 28 A SONG .
... . The uncertainty of his hopes - the bar that fortune had placed between him and the Lady Blanche in his questioned birth- his mother's melancholy , and the little chance that was then in the time , of any warlike 28 A SONG .
Página 41
... fortunes , " said he , " in a rotten boat ? ” 66 " Will Sir Amias answer me one question ? " Certainly ! Wherefore should I not ? All I do is known to you ; from you I have no secrets . " " Is that the case , Sir Amias ? ' " Well , what ...
... fortunes , " said he , " in a rotten boat ? ” 66 " Will Sir Amias answer me one question ? " Certainly ! Wherefore should I not ? All I do is known to you ; from you I have no secrets . " " Is that the case , Sir Amias ? ' " Well , what ...
Página 68
... fortune , and the suf ferings to which , without offence , his noble mother had been so long consigned . But the plump heart of youth soon rejects sor- row . As the morning brightened , and the goodly prospect of woodlands and fields be ...
... fortune , and the suf ferings to which , without offence , his noble mother had been so long consigned . But the plump heart of youth soon rejects sor- row . As the morning brightened , and the goodly prospect of woodlands and fields be ...
Página 88
... fortunes of Rothelan were restored to their proper course , there was yet something which , the Chronicler says , no one could understand . Great re - payments were offered to Adonijah for his singular mu- nificence , but he accepted ...
... fortunes of Rothelan were restored to their proper course , there was yet something which , the Chronicler says , no one could understand . Great re - payments were offered to Adonijah for his singular mu- nificence , but he accepted ...
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Rothelan: A Romance of the English Histories: [the Quarantine; Or ..., Volumen1 John Galt Sin vista previa disponible - 2018 |
Términos y frases comunes
abbate Adonijah Amias de Crosby appearance Beatrice beautiful began Bellavoce Belletta bishop Bishop of Winchester boards bosom Cagliari Carlina castle Chronicler confess Corsican Count Herman countenance course cried dead delighted Don Lopez door dreadful earl Earl of Lincoln effect entered exclaimed eyes father fell fortunes friends gave hand hath heard heart Heaven Hubert Neville Improvisatoré inquired JOHN GALT journey Lady Albertina looked Lord Edmund Ludolph Maddalen manner master ment mind morning Naples ness never night noble Padre Urbano Palatine passed passion Patetica pearance penitent perform person pestilence physiognomy plague Porto Vecchio possessed Ralph Hanslap replied resolved retired returned Rothelan Sassari scene servants Signora Sir Amias Sir Gondibert slave soon SPAEWIFE spirit stood story stranger taste theatre thing thou thought tion told took uncle voice whole William Cowper window woman words young baron
Pasajes populares
Página 5 - No place was so wild that the plague did not visit, — none so secret that the quick-sighted pestilence did not discover, — none could fly that it did not overtake. It was as if Heaven had repented the making of mankind, and was shovelling them all into the sepulchre. Justice was forgotten, and her courts deserted: the terrified...
Página 5 - ... cattle went moaning up and down the fields, wondering what had become of their keepers ; — the rooks and the ravens came into the towns, and built their nests in the mute belfries; — silence was universal, save when some infected wretch was seen clamouring at a window.
Página 6 - Shrift there was none ;— churches and chapels were open, but neither priest nor penitent entered ; all went to the charnel-house. The sexton and the physician were cast into the same deep and wide grave ; — the testator and his heirs and executors were hurled from the same cart into the same hole together.
Página 314 - Hints respecting the Improvement of the Literary and Scientific Education of Candidates for the Degree of Doctor of Medicine, in the University of Edinburgh.
Página 104 - ... they received on those who fall into their hands. The condition of European servants in that climate is very wretched ; their work is hard, and for the most part abroad, exposed to an unwholesome air ; their diet coarse, being either poul or bread made of Indian corn, or homine or mush, which is meal of the same kind moistened with the fat of bacon ; and their drink, water sweetened with a little ginger and molasses.
Página 6 - Shrift there was none; churches and chapels were open, but neither priest nor penitent entered, all went to the charnel-house. The sexton and the physician were cast into the same deep and wide grave, — the testator and his heirs and executors, were hurled from the same cart into the same hole together. Fires became extinguished, as if its element too had expired, — the seams of the sailorless ships yawned to the sun.
Página 70 - Comes toward Dunsinane. — Arm, arm, and out ! — If this, which he avouches, does appear, There is nor flying hence, nor tarrying here. I 'gin to be a-weary of the sun, And wish th' estate o
Página 6 - ... among men. The wells overflowed, and the conduits ran to waste ; — the dogs banded themselves together, having lost their masters, and ran howling over all the land; — horses perished of famine in their stalls; — old friends but looked at one another when they met, keeping themselves far aloof ; — creditors claimed no debts, and courtiers performed their promises; — little children went wandering up and down, and numbers were seen dead in all corners.