The Dublin University Magazine, Volume 63William Curry, Jun., and Company, 1864 - Ireland |
From inside the book
Page 3
... head , so to speak , and is away . Peregrine cannot now draw back . He is astride , so to speak , on the back of the Wild Irishman . It is fully eighty - two miles , and barely two hours gone , before his groom can pull him in somewhere ...
... head , so to speak , and is away . Peregrine cannot now draw back . He is astride , so to speak , on the back of the Wild Irishman . It is fully eighty - two miles , and barely two hours gone , before his groom can pull him in somewhere ...
Page 15
... head gave a little sudden jerk , and his eye looked inquiringly and anxiously into the master's face . For a long while he said nothing , but his glance wandered round the cheer- less room , and fell upon the half dead embers in the ...
... head gave a little sudden jerk , and his eye looked inquiringly and anxiously into the master's face . For a long while he said nothing , but his glance wandered round the cheer- less room , and fell upon the half dead embers in the ...
Page 19
... head ; he thereupon waited some minutes before renewing the conversation . The old gentleman asleep before the fire continued snor- ing in different keys and tones all the while ; once starting up suddenly for an instant with a quick ...
... head ; he thereupon waited some minutes before renewing the conversation . The old gentleman asleep before the fire continued snor- ing in different keys and tones all the while ; once starting up suddenly for an instant with a quick ...
Page 25
... head , miss . " " Yes , mamma , I will put the snow quite out of my head , ' , " said Bessie , turning her laughing face towards her mother . " I will completely forget there is such a thing . Dear mamma , go back , upstairs , and say I ...
... head , miss . " " Yes , mamma , I will put the snow quite out of my head , ' , " said Bessie , turning her laughing face towards her mother . " I will completely forget there is such a thing . Dear mamma , go back , upstairs , and say I ...
Page 29
DEMONIAC IDEALS IN POETRY . blood , he presents us with merely a raw head. MILTON'S demons , Johnson remarks , are too noble ; but they are , never- theless , the most transcendent em- bodiments of Satanic nature in poetry . They are ...
DEMONIAC IDEALS IN POETRY . blood , he presents us with merely a raw head. MILTON'S demons , Johnson remarks , are too noble ; but they are , never- theless , the most transcendent em- bodiments of Satanic nature in poetry . They are ...
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Common terms and phrases
Amleth appeared asked Bagly beautiful Bessie better called Captain character Chelford child Church Cormac court Crosbie Danish dark daugh dear death Dillon Doctor Dodd Dogget Dorcas druid Eblana eyes face fairy fancy father favour feel Genoese girl Gyges hand head heard heart honour hour Ireland Irish Jenny Black King knew lady Larkin light lived Lizette London look Lord Lord Lyndhurst Macbeth Markham House Meiklam Meiklam's Rest ment mind Miss Lake Miss Stutzer Mocha morning Munster nature never night o'er once person Pilmer play poem poor present Prince Queen Rachel racter round Ryder scene schools seemed Slesvig smile soon sort speak spirit Stanley Stanley Lake story strange tell thing thou thought tion Tom Ryder took turned Vicar walk wife wild Wilks woman words write Wylder Yaxley young