New Monthly Magazine, and Universal Register, 第 72 巻E. W. Allen, 1844 |
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21 ページ
... light coming in from the left , and beneath which was placed a glass containing some three or five delicate and odoriferous flowers -- he went on talking and describing its beauties ; then opening the glass before it , he made me look ...
... light coming in from the left , and beneath which was placed a glass containing some three or five delicate and odoriferous flowers -- he went on talking and describing its beauties ; then opening the glass before it , he made me look ...
25 ページ
... light - hearted peasantry , those long , straggling lines of dirty , tile - roofed cottages that stretch up from the highway , have for their inhabitants , an ignorant , stunted , half - savage race , miserable , misanthropic , and ...
... light - hearted peasantry , those long , straggling lines of dirty , tile - roofed cottages that stretch up from the highway , have for their inhabitants , an ignorant , stunted , half - savage race , miserable , misanthropic , and ...
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... light . For this money he knew there was no fear of those who contributed it ever calling him to account ; for so well was the society arranged , that the number at large could not communicate with him , except through infe- rior ...
... light . For this money he knew there was no fear of those who contributed it ever calling him to account ; for so well was the society arranged , that the number at large could not communicate with him , except through infe- rior ...
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... light , and exerting upon her all his powers of fascination , and they were many . His object was to lead her to crime , partly for his own advantage , to have her completely in his power , partly from revenge ; for , from the first ...
... light , and exerting upon her all his powers of fascination , and they were many . His object was to lead her to crime , partly for his own advantage , to have her completely in his power , partly from revenge ; for , from the first ...
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... light of a dark lantern , having previously hung up a couple of great coats by way of blind be- fore the loophole by which we had entered . Presently we came to the coffin , prized open the lid , and turned aside the drapery to see what ...
... light of a dark lantern , having previously hung up a couple of great coats by way of blind be- fore the loophole by which we had entered . Presently we came to the coffin , prized open the lid , and turned aside the drapery to see what ...
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多く使われている語句
admiration Agatha appeared asked beauty Beckford Bedonia Belle de Jour Belle de Nuit Bertha better Borgotaro called carriage character charming Chatterley Chiavenna court daughter dear delight dinner Don Esteban door dress Edward exclaimed eyes fancy father fear feeling felt Finnikin Finny Florus Forton fortune gentleman girl give Granada hand happy Harrington Hawke head hear heard heart honour hope Horace Vere hour Jenkinson Kitty knew Lady Moreton laugh Lindaraxa live look Lord Madame Madame de Staël mamma Maria Maria Stella master ment mind Miss Kitty Miss Letty Miss Longiver Moorish morning mother never night once passed Paul Moro person poor prince Red Rover replied returned Roberts seemed smile spirit sure talk Talleyrand tell thing thought tion took turned Vathek voice walk waltz whole wife woman word young lady
人気のある引用
143 ページ - If music be the food of love, play on, Give me excess of it, that, surfeiting, The appetite may sicken and so die. That strain again! It had a dying fall...
282 ページ - My subject was the new and strange experience of the fallen humanity, as it went forth from Paradise into the wilderness ; with a peculiar reference to Eve's allotted grief, which, considering that self-sacrifice belonged to her womanhood, and the consciousness of originating the Fall to her offence, appeared to me imperfectly apprehended hitherto, and more expressible by a woman than a man.
431 ページ - I have received a letter from Mr. Herbert, in answer to that which I left at Nevis for him. My greatest wish is to be united to you ; and the foundation of all conjugal happiness, real love, and esteem, is, I trust, what you believe I possess in the strongest degree towards you.
404 ページ - Beginning with deep tones, it unfolds itself in gloom-inspiring harmonies, and truly reflects the impression which the gloom of an extensive wood produces on our feelings. Occasional glancing and disconnected tones appear to betoken light, breaking through the darkness of the grove ; and thus is the first drop-scene of the opera — the grove of sacrifice — fitly delineated. Assuredly the striking qualities of this tone-picture will still more forcibly suggest themselves to the reader, when I mention...
151 ページ - Appennine — nowhere more so than in the unexplored district into which we purpose to introduce our readers — is easily found as true, as pure, as ignorant a piety as could be in the times of the earliest Christianity. The manners of those people are stationary, and know no progress either for good...
151 ページ - Opera-house — talking and laughing, and from their eye-glasses darting death at the beauties on the right and left. In the interior of a small screened altar, something is going on which nobody sees or hears, and which may be Latin or Greek, prayers or curses, for aught any body cares.
284 ページ - And a look of human woe from his staring eyes did go, Toll slowly. And a sharp cry uttered he, in a foretold agony...
217 ページ - How can you say such things ? " cried Sybil, drawing back indignantly, " you who can be so kind and good when you choose ! I won't listen ; you can't make me doubt him ; only he himself could do that, and he never will. Why are you so bitter against my poor Ronald ? " " When you have lived as long in the world as I have, my dear, you may be as suspicious of everything men say that sounds disinterested and noble, as I am. But I won't say another word. Mr. Ronald Campion may be everything that is high-minded...
399 ページ - ... belief. Doubtless Lord B. ' told you of the order of the Aulic Council for the Archbishop of ' Aquileia to go to St. Mark's in a coach and six ; as if the Lord ' Mayor were ordered to go to St. James's Palace in a gondola.
404 ページ - ... corresponding with certain emotions of the soul. ' Of all man's senses, the sight and hearing are those through which the greatest influence upon the mind and heart is produced ; which, therefore, constitute the most powerful springs of the moral and mental perceptions, actions, and judgments of mankind. But the hearing would seem the most powerful and operative of the two, because inharmonious, jarring tones are capable of shocking and torturing our feelings to their inmost core to such an extent...