The Dowager; Or The New School for Scandal |
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Página 3
... marriage , by young Lord Gransden , was that of being so eligibly situated as to be overlooked by that much respected personage , the Dowager Lady Delmaine ; while a tolerable rent had actually been refused by a fashionable house ...
... marriage , by young Lord Gransden , was that of being so eligibly situated as to be overlooked by that much respected personage , the Dowager Lady Delmaine ; while a tolerable rent had actually been refused by a fashionable house ...
Página 5
... married later in life than his predeces- sors ; and his son , Lord Chichester , had only lately come into parliament ... marriage with an heiress ; and altogether , there was little excuse for the avidity with which , like the clerk of ...
... married later in life than his predeces- sors ; and his son , Lord Chichester , had only lately come into parliament ... marriage with an heiress ; and altogether , there was little excuse for the avidity with which , like the clerk of ...
Página 7
... married young . The spoiled child of a silly mother , who judged education a superfluous torment to one so highly ... marriage of her elder daughter , Lady Mary Chichester , one of the most charming women of her day , with Mr. Morison ...
... married young . The spoiled child of a silly mother , who judged education a superfluous torment to one so highly ... marriage of her elder daughter , Lady Mary Chichester , one of the most charming women of her day , with Mr. Morison ...
Página 12
... marriage to perfect the happiness of which they alone were wanting , used vainly to represent to their mother the improbability of such a change . " My dearest mother , at her age , what would you have ? " cried Augustus , a lively ...
... marriage to perfect the happiness of which they alone were wanting , used vainly to represent to their mother the improbability of such a change . " My dearest mother , at her age , what would you have ? " cried Augustus , a lively ...
Página 22
... marriage , had scarcely ex- hausted the delight of being a viscountess ; the husband through whom the distinction ... married to a country gentleman of 22 THE DOWAGER .
... marriage , had scarcely ex- hausted the delight of being a viscountess ; the husband through whom the distinction ... married to a country gentleman of 22 THE DOWAGER .
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Dowager; Or, the New School for Scandal Catherine Grace Frances Gore Sin vista previa disponible - 2018 |
The Dowager; Or, the New School for Scandal Catherine Grace Frances Gore Sin vista previa disponible - 2022 |
Términos y frases comunes
acquaintance agreeable Alicia de Wendover Augustus Langley beauty Bennet better brother carriage Cecilia charming Countess cousin cried Lady Crouch daughter dear Delmaine's dinner door drawing-room earl estates exclaimed eyes fancy fashion father favour Fcap feelings gilt girl governess Grans Grosvenor-street hand happiness hear heard heart heiress Hilsby honour husband inquired John Evelyn John Gilbert Johnny Chichester Lady Alicia Lady Charlotte Lady Dearmouth Lady Delmaine Lady Gransden Lady Mary Langley Lady Medwyn Lady Meliora Lady Seldon ladyship Langley Park Langley's Laura London look Lord Chichester Lord Chichester's Lord Delmaine Lord Gransden M'Intosh ma'am marriage Maxwell Mazzini mind Morison Langley morning mother neighbour never night Oakham party perhaps person poor Prince Massimo replied Lady Mary scandal scarcely season Sir Henry Windsor Sir Jacob sister smile society sure thing tone town Vaux Viscountess Wallis wife Wilsmere woman
Pasajes populares
Página 107 - I know there are a set of malicious, prating, prudent gossips, both male and female, who murder characters to kill time ; and will rob a young fellow of his good name before he has years to know the value of it.
Página 155 - With that low cunning which in fools supplies, And amply too, the place of being wise, Which Nature, kind indulgent parent, gave To qualify the blockhead for a knave...
Página 15 - That Fop, whose pride affects a patron's name, Yet absent, wounds an author's honest fame: Who can your merit selfishly approve, And show the sense of it without the love; Who has the vanity to call you friend...