Farnorth, Volume 2Chapman & Hall, 1866 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 30
Page 9
... heiress have only a reference to a paint- ing by one of the old masters , which you may see any day at the Dulwich Gallery . Horace has advanced one opinion and Clara another ; they have both eagerly sustained their different posi ...
... heiress have only a reference to a paint- ing by one of the old masters , which you may see any day at the Dulwich Gallery . Horace has advanced one opinion and Clara another ; they have both eagerly sustained their different posi ...
Page 23
... looked much higher , his sisters think . If the Curate had been successful in his pursuit of the little heiress of Becklands it would have been altogether different . Zoé would have had no Arrival of the Miss Middletons. ...
... looked much higher , his sisters think . If the Curate had been successful in his pursuit of the little heiress of Becklands it would have been altogether different . Zoé would have had no Arrival of the Miss Middletons. ...
Page 29
... heiress of Becklands . The wedding - day has arrived , and the bells of the parish church are ringing merrily . Sophy Bland is Sophy Middleton now , and she is pale enough in her veil and orange blossom to satisfy the requirements of ...
... heiress of Becklands . The wedding - day has arrived , and the bells of the parish church are ringing merrily . Sophy Bland is Sophy Middleton now , and she is pale enough in her veil and orange blossom to satisfy the requirements of ...
Page 32
... heiress of Becklands tended almost as much as the presence of the august Dean to reconcile the patricians to their brother's unhappy marriage . And then Mrs. Sil- vester's feeble treble made itself heard , and as she bleated about my ...
... heiress of Becklands tended almost as much as the presence of the august Dean to reconcile the patricians to their brother's unhappy marriage . And then Mrs. Sil- vester's feeble treble made itself heard , and as she bleated about my ...
Page 47
... heiress from the charge of inconsistency , and , I repeat , the Baronet has reason to complain . When the train carried away beautiful Clara , it carried away Sir Mor- timer's best ally . There is no one at Becklands to sound the ...
... heiress from the charge of inconsistency , and , I repeat , the Baronet has reason to complain . When the train carried away beautiful Clara , it carried away Sir Mor- timer's best ally . There is no one at Becklands to sound the ...
Common terms and phrases
Algy Algy's daughter Algy's wife Ann Dalton Banques Baronet beautiful believe Belle Grange better carissima carriage child Clara Silvester Clarry cried dead dear death Denassie dinner Doctor dooce eagerly Edward Sparkles excitement eyes face Farnorth father French Giles Houndly glad Gothic Hall Grandly Manor Grandly of Grandly Halley hand handsome Harding Harding's heard heart hope Horace Snowe house of Plantagenet impatiently John Dalton Jove Lady Mortimer Lady Plantagenet ladyship late lawyer lips little girl little heiress look Madame Maison de Santé mamma manner marriage Mary Snowe master of Becklands miserable Miss Alathea Miss Grandly Miss Middletons Miss Snowe Miss Winifred Monseigneur morning mother never Newcome once pale papa Plantagenet Park poor Miss pretty Quilea relict Rose Cottage scarcely Sir Mortimer Plantagenet sister smile Snowdrop soldier sorry tell thing thought tion told uncle unhappy Weasle woman words Zoé's
Popular passages
Page 135 - Hamlet with the part of the Prince of Denmark omitted, for so far I have said nothing whatever about technical education.
Page 55 - ... this little girl with me to your mother, Edward, that she may question her, if she wishes it, about poor Michael, and I wish you to go with us, my dear boy ; it is better that your poor mother should have you with her." " You are going to tell mother ?" said the boy with a shudder. " Yes, Edward ! — it must be done, and the sooner it is over the better. Your mother is a good woman, and a pious Christian, my dear boy. She will know and feel that all that can befall her is the will of God ; and...
Page 136 - The autocrat, encouraged by impunity and the weakness of the great Powers of Europe, would employ himself in making preparations for another and still more formidable aggression upon his neighbours. I repeat that it is impossible now that the war can be averted consistently with England's honour.
Page 127 - You may depend upon it that now is the time for resistance ; now is the time for the powers of Western and Central Europe to form an alliance with Turkey, and so combine to punish the daring bigot who imperils the best interests of civilization to feed his miserable vanity and insatiable ambition.
Page 128 - He pretends that it is not the lust of conquest which urges him to attempt the supremacy of his church and the expulsion of the Mussulmans from Europe. He seeks to hide the bloody sword of ambition beneath the robe of the fanatic. It is false...
Page 251 - It is a very long time since we have had such a funeral in Farnorth as we shall see to-day. Sparkles has made all the arrangements, and I think they will do him credit. After you, Sir Mortimer," the doctor added, courteously, as he wrestled helplessly with his stiff black gloves.