The Truth about TolnaCentury Company, 1906 - 359 ページ |
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... voice , and turned to him . " Oh , Mr. Alden , the half was not told me . " Mrs. Fanning began a sentence . With a disregard too unconscious to be rude , Denys dropped into the empty chair beside her daughter . " Miss Fanning , you are ...
... voice , and turned to him . " Oh , Mr. Alden , the half was not told me . " Mrs. Fanning began a sentence . With a disregard too unconscious to be rude , Denys dropped into the empty chair beside her daughter . " Miss Fanning , you are ...
6 ページ
... voice ? " if The girl laughed gently . " I am answered , you don't even remember your misfortune . Mother told me ... voice , and the tem- perament , and a tremendous power of work , and a love of art that was- Oh , well ! You know how ...
... voice ? " if The girl laughed gently . " I am answered , you don't even remember your misfortune . Mother told me ... voice , and the tem- perament , and a tremendous power of work , and a love of art that was- Oh , well ! You know how ...
7 ページ
... voice- did you ever hear tone more golden ? He has the physique that I never had , the good looks . He is the artist born . Yes , to - night does atone - a thousand times . To have him succeed - why , it's a thousand thousand times ...
... voice- did you ever hear tone more golden ? He has the physique that I never had , the good looks . He is the artist born . Yes , to - night does atone - a thousand times . To have him succeed - why , it's a thousand thousand times ...
8 ページ
... it , I took him to Sbriglia . But the voice , the brain , the art , the passion , all are his . " If she felt the reproof , she had not the grace to acknowledge it . " Mr. Alden , " she murmured , " how 8 THE TRUTH ABOUT TOLNA.
... it , I took him to Sbriglia . But the voice , the brain , the art , the passion , all are his . " If she felt the reproof , she had not the grace to acknowledge it . " Mr. Alden , " she murmured , " how 8 THE TRUTH ABOUT TOLNA.
20 ページ
... voice , which her boy - my Denys , a little chap , then , of five or six - had inherited . Years after , he was preparing for opera , with wonderfully brilliant prospects , when his voice broke down from over - training . 20 THE TRUTH ...
... voice , which her boy - my Denys , a little chap , then , of five or six - had inherited . Years after , he was preparing for opera , with wonderfully brilliant prospects , when his voice broke down from over - training . 20 THE TRUTH ...
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多く使われている語句
admit afraid American prince answered asked beautiful believe Burnham cheek confess course cried daughter dear Denny Denys Alden Denys rose Denys's dinner door eyes face father feel felt François girl give glad hair hand happy hear heart Hirt Hirt's Honor Hammond hour Hungarian Hungary Hyacinth Jessie knew lady laughed live Lohengrin looked Madge Magyar Margery Margery's marry Maurice Maurice's Maurus mean meant ment mind Miss Fanning Miss Hammond Monsieur Tolna Morris Fordham mother n't know ness never night ning Nirvana Nortie opera Palladium play red burned remember seemed silence Sing singer smile soul speak spoke stood suppose sure talk Tannhäuser tell there's thing thought tion to-night told TRUTH ABOUT TOLNA turned valet voice wait Willie Willie Smith Willoughby Smith wonder words young
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211 ページ - From wandering on a foreign strand ? If such there breathe, go mark him well : For him no minstrel raptures swell ; High though his titles, proud his name, Boundless his wealth as wish can claim ; Despite those titles, power and pelf, The wretch, concentred all in self, Living, shall forfeit fair renown, And, doubly dying, shall go down To the vile dust, from whence he sprung, Unwept, unhonored and unsung.
320 ページ - The sluggard is wiser in his own conceit than seven men that can render a reason.
157 ページ - A weary lot is thine, fair maid, A weary lot is thine ! To pull the thorn thy brow to braid, And press the rue for wine ! A lightsome eye, a soldier's mien, A feather of the blue, A doublet of the Lincoln green, — No more of me you knew, My love ! No more of me you knew. " This morn is merry June, I trow, The rose is budding fain ;* But she shall bloom in winter snow, Ere we two meet again.
41 ページ - And let me the cannikin clink, clink; And let me the cannikin clink. A soldier's a man; O man's life's but a span, Why then, let a soldier drink.
16 ページ - Runkle reveals him upon the stage of the Metropolitan Opera HERO House, as Lohengrin, and this is the way he looks : Tall, slender, straight, his silver armor against the dark curtain gleaming with unearthly radiance, his outstretched hand grasping his shining sword, his great, grave eyes looking not at, but past the audience, like eyes that see visions — he was the very incarnation of the militant angel, heaven-sent to champion, to right distresses Off the stage, with his "pale distinguished face...
17 ページ - ... pale distinguished face" bearing "the indefinable but mistakable look of race," his "extraordinary personal beauty," and his "pleading eyes, almond-shaped under wide, level brows and grave as with all the sorrows of the world," he is even more interesting. Add to this that he is accredited with being "as shy of the world, as much out of sympathy with our life, as much wrapt in his ideals as a young monk," it is small wonder that he makes fifty thousand a year and is adored by the Matinee Girl.
161 ページ - I have loved her since the day I first saw her. I have desired her for my wife. God! do I want her to love you?
12 ページ - I don't want to rush in where angels fear to tread, but — does to-night atone to you for your own calamity?
353 ページ - But when I told him that I was going to give up my great match — " her eyes filled with sudden tears.