Belgravia, a London magazine, conducted by M.E. Braddon, Volume 81869 - 2 pages |
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Results 1-5 of 79
Page 5
... kind before I quite believe in them . My own impression is , that civilised man or woman of humble class hardly ever yet knocked for the first time at the door of a great West - end mansion without a beating of the heart , a mingling of ...
... kind before I quite believe in them . My own impression is , that civilised man or woman of humble class hardly ever yet knocked for the first time at the door of a great West - end mansion without a beating of the heart , a mingling of ...
Page 6
... kind of outrage upon Church and State , to ask to see such a man at all on Sunday . To go to church , too , seemed , in presence of the splendid crowds , so necessary and becoming a part of respecta- bility , that I felt like a social ...
... kind of outrage upon Church and State , to ask to see such a man at all on Sunday . To go to church , too , seemed , in presence of the splendid crowds , so necessary and becoming a part of respecta- bility , that I felt like a social ...
Page 7
Belgravia Mary Elizabeth Braddon. do something kind and substantial for his niece and his brother's wife , whose chief crime , poor thing , appeared to have been her inconvenient virtue ; and why he would not at least take them out of ...
Belgravia Mary Elizabeth Braddon. do something kind and substantial for his niece and his brother's wife , whose chief crime , poor thing , appeared to have been her inconvenient virtue ; and why he would not at least take them out of ...
Page 10
... kind . Could you not make terms with him , and buy him off , for her sake and for her mother's ? They have had so much unhappiness and poverty ; and it's such a pity for poor Lilla . " " Mr. Temple , you appear to be so intimately ...
... kind . Could you not make terms with him , and buy him off , for her sake and for her mother's ? They have had so much unhappiness and poverty ; and it's such a pity for poor Lilla . " " Mr. Temple , you appear to be so intimately ...
Page 12
... kind of him to walk with me just there and then ; I was so very carelessly , not to say shabbily , dressed . My old friend and foe did not seem to care . " You have been in London long , Mr. Banks ? " asked Lambert . I told him how many ...
... kind of him to walk with me just there and then ; I was so very carelessly , not to say shabbily , dressed . My old friend and foe did not seem to care . " You have been in London long , Mr. Banks ? " asked Lambert . I told him how many ...
Common terms and phrases
Ainsleigh asked beautiful beetroot Belgravia believe better bite Brown Lady called Captain Castle child Christina daughter dead deadly deadly snakes dear delight Dolores door Drury Lane Edmund Kean Emanuel English eyes face father favour feel felt gentleman George Osborne ghost girl gunpowder hand happy head heard heart hole honour hope hour Kean Kemble kind Kingsmead knew Lady Burnham Lady Marlesdale Lambert legs light Lilla Lyndon lived look Lord Lord Burnham married mind Miss Lyndon morning mother never night noctambulism Omichund once passed PAUL MASSIE perhaps played poor reason Rebecca Reichstein reptile round seemed seen Shere Ali Sinfray Skeffington smile snake sort speak Stapleton story strange talk tell Temple theatre thing thought told took Toxteth Vanity Fair venomous snakes walked wife woman word young
Popular passages
Page 362 - I will love thec still, my dear, While the sands o' life shall run. And fare thee well, my only love, And fare thee well awhile ; And I will come again, my love, Tho
Page 227 - and exclaiming in all our wants— " I come To answer thy best pleasure—be't to fly, To swim, to dive into the fire, to ride On the curled clouds—to thy strong bidding task Ariel and all his quality.
Page 290 - opening other little blind loopholes, turning day into night and night into day. For at the first dawn of morning they closed all the massive shutters of the old building they occupied, and lighted a couple of tapers, which threw out only the ghastliest and feeblest of rays. " By the aid of these we then busied
Page 290 - The sable divinity would not herself dwell with us always; but we could counterfeit her presence." And this they effected by a process reminding us of Butler's charge against the Duke of Bucks, of damming up the lights of nature
Page 385 - by the Neck, but not till you be Dead, for you must be cut down alive, then your Bowels must be taken out, and burnt before your Faces ; Then your Heads must be sever'd from your Bodies, and your Bodies divided each into four Quarters ; and those must be at the King's disposal. And God Almighty be merciful to your
Page 72 - A few days before his death, Sheridan had written that affecting letter to Rogers the poet, asking for 150?.: "They are going to put the carpets out of window, and break into Mrs. S.'s room and take me. For God's sake let me
Page 136 - like centaurs and griffins, seems undeniable. Making all allowance for exaggerations, there remains ample evidence that at the end of the sixteenth and beginning of the seventeenth centuries there
Page 290 - souls in dreams—reading, writing, or conversing, until warned by the clock of the advent of true darkness." Then they sallied forth into the streets, arm-in-arm, continuing the topics of the day, or roaming far and wide,
Page 238 - When you think he has exhausted his battery of looks in unaccountable warfare with your gravity, suddenly he sprouts out an entirely new set of features, like Hydra. He, and he alone, makes
Page 231 - Yes, as rocks are When foamy billows split themselves against Their flinty ribs ; or as the moon is moved, When wolves, with hunger pin'd, howl at her brightness.