Sayings and Doings at the Tremont House: In the Year 1832, Volumen1Allen and Ticknor, 1833 |
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Página 120
... Jane , my love , take off your bonnet you look heated . ” 66 - " Enough to make one so , " said the young lady , walking about , such a day as this , in such a stupid place . But I cannot understand what Mrs Mudfort meant by denying ...
... Jane , my love , take off your bonnet you look heated . ” 66 - " Enough to make one so , " said the young lady , walking about , such a day as this , in such a stupid place . But I cannot understand what Mrs Mudfort meant by denying ...
Página 121
... Jane Dawe , laughing . " D. Mrs Trollope ! " returned her father , an- grily . " I beg , miss , you will not be perpetually throw- ing her book in my teeth . I shall put my legs where I please , in spite of all the Trollopes in the ...
... Jane Dawe , laughing . " D. Mrs Trollope ! " returned her father , an- grily . " I beg , miss , you will not be perpetually throw- ing her book in my teeth . I shall put my legs where I please , in spite of all the Trollopes in the ...
Página 122
... Jane , his dancing with me at Mrs Congreve's , in Washington ? " " Oh , to be sure ! Mr Honeywood , I believe , is of Baltimore . " 66 - " I recollect , " said Mrs Dawe ; " he is a very clever young man one that has very little to say ...
... Jane , his dancing with me at Mrs Congreve's , in Washington ? " " Oh , to be sure ! Mr Honeywood , I believe , is of Baltimore . " 66 - " I recollect , " said Mrs Dawe ; " he is a very clever young man one that has very little to say ...
Página 123
... Jane Dawe , " PAUL SLANEY is Arabella's particular favorite . " " Girls ! girls ! " cried Mr Dawe , winking at Julia ... Jane Dawe ; " how came you to find that out , Arabella ? I declare , I think him one of the most ill - tempered ...
... Jane Dawe , " PAUL SLANEY is Arabella's particular favorite . " " Girls ! girls ! " cried Mr Dawe , winking at Julia ... Jane Dawe ; " how came you to find that out , Arabella ? I declare , I think him one of the most ill - tempered ...
Página 124
... Jane ; and how he talks ! How I love to hear him talk about the President , " said Mr Dawe ; " ha , ha , ha ! " " Oh , yes , " returned Miss Jane ; " he is Jackson- mad , and that reminds me how prone he is to talk poli- tics before ...
... Jane ; and how he talks ! How I love to hear him talk about the President , " said Mr Dawe ; " ha , ha , ha ! " " Oh , yes , " returned Miss Jane ; " he is Jackson- mad , and that reminds me how prone he is to talk poli- tics before ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Sayings and Doings at the Tremont House, in the Year 1832 (Classic Reprint) Zachary Philemon Vangrifter Sin vista previa disponible - 2018 |
Sayings and Doings at the Tremont House, in the Year 1832 (Classic Reprint) Zachary Philemon Vangrifter Sin vista previa disponible - 2017 |
Términos y frases comunes
acquaintance Alexander Comfit Almira aunt BARNWELL Basil Hall beautiful believe blushed Boston CAPTAIN PARKENRATH Charles Alleyne cholera Cicero CONTI COSTARD SLY Count d'ye dear devil doctor door Edmund Sanderson Emily Enfield England English eyes feel fellow FENWICK GAULTIMAN gentleman girl give glass GRIFTER hand head hear heard heart Jack Adams Julia LAST DOLLAR laugh leyne litel look Lucretia Mehitable madam married matter mind Miss Felicia Miss Jane Dawe Miss Powell morning Mudfort never night noise Norfolk House perhaps person poor pretty RAGUSAN recollect returned shake smile Somerville soon Sophia speak Spokelford stairs story Street sure talk tell There's no mistake thing thought told TREMONT HOUSE turn uncle Christopher VANGRIFTER waiters walked WALSINGHAM WARING Washington Irving whispered widow Jones William Lauder woman word young lady وو
Pasajes populares
Página 188 - Nor was his name unheard or unadored In ancient Greece; and in Ausonian land Men called him Mulciber; and how he fell From Heaven they fabled, thrown by angry Jove Sheer o'er the crystal battlements...
Página 153 - Those who are in the power of evil habits must conquer them as they can; and conquered they must be, or neither wisdom nor happiness can be attained; but those who are not yet subject to their influence may, by timely caution, preserve their freedom; they may effectually resolve to escape the tyrant, whom they will very vainly resolve to conquer.
Página 184 - When the devil was sick, the devil a monk would be, When the devil was well, the devil a monk was he.
Página 131 - had not been for her, I should not have been half the man I am.
Página 198 - ... that justice must not be wholly superseded even by benignant mercy? Is not our new President right in saying that, in the present position of this nation, indulgence to leading traitors may be cruelty to the state? For one, sir, I must confess a mortal repugnance to bloody revenge, and I believe the worst use you can make of a man is to hang him.
Página 166 - Wilkie's memory could scarcely furnish him with prettier scenes than the following sketches. The first is an invitation sent across the Atlantic to his American relative. ' You are now almost a stranger in your native land. Twenty-three years form a large portion of life ; and so long you have been absent from Britain, and suffering the scorching beams and the numbing colds of the atmosphere of Virginia. Do not you think you should relish a sight of your old friends, and of the scenes of your infancy?...
Página 54 - The strongest bond of union amongItalians is only a coincidence of hatred. Never were the Tuscans so unanimous as in hating the other states of Italy ; the Senesi agreed best in hating all the other Tuscans ; the citizens of Siena, in hating the rest of the Senesi ; and in the city itself the same amiable passion was subdivided among the different wards.
Página 187 - ... heap of strange materials wound up in that shape and texture, and packed together with wonderful art in the several cavities of the skull. For, as Homer tells us, that the blood of the gods is not real blood, but only something like it; so we found that the brain of a beau is not a real brain, but only something like it.
Página 166 - ... could have cried heartily. — (Now listen.) I looked into Mean Water, to see if there were any minnows, and there they lay under the banks, just as when we left them.
Página 195 - And the little song goes on to say 'That your majesty got well — And — " Hold ! " — cried the Devil in a rage, Foul fish ; or I'll break your — shell !