The Works of Thomas Hood...Derby and Jackson, 1861 |
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Page 20
... sight , an unreasonable demand . May I pro- fess no tenderness for Belinda without vowing an attachment to Shock ? Must I feel an equal warmth towards my bosom friend and his greyhound ? Some country gentlemen keep a pack of dogs . Am I ...
... sight , an unreasonable demand . May I pro- fess no tenderness for Belinda without vowing an attachment to Shock ? Must I feel an equal warmth towards my bosom friend and his greyhound ? Some country gentlemen keep a pack of dogs . Am I ...
Page 34
... play music , -at sight . The polar attractions and repulsions insisted on by the phre- nologist affect me not ; but I am not proof against a pleasant or villanous set of features . Sometimes , I own 34 FANCY PORTRAITS .
... play music , -at sight . The polar attractions and repulsions insisted on by the phre- nologist affect me not ; but I am not proof against a pleasant or villanous set of features . Sometimes , I own 34 FANCY PORTRAITS .
Page 73
... sight of the Orderly , who thought proper to deliver the document into no other hands than mine , my mother - in - law cried , and my wife fainted on the spot . They had no notion 4 66 of any distinctions in military service , a soldier ...
... sight of the Orderly , who thought proper to deliver the document into no other hands than mine , my mother - in - law cried , and my wife fainted on the spot . They had no notion 4 66 of any distinctions in military service , a soldier ...
Page 79
... SIGHT . ghosts , and both making eagerly towards the church porch . Much as they had just wished for this vision , they could not help quaking and stopping on the spot , as if turned to a pair of tombstones , and in this position the ...
... SIGHT . ghosts , and both making eagerly towards the church porch . Much as they had just wished for this vision , they could not help quaking and stopping on the spot , as if turned to a pair of tombstones , and in this position the ...
Page 98
... sight ! I saw him come in ten lengths ahead of everything , hollow ! hollow ! I had no voice to shout with , and it was fortunate . Man and horse went , as usual , after the race , to be weighed , and were put into the scale . They rose ...
... sight ! I saw him come in ten lengths ahead of everything , hollow ! hollow ! I had no voice to shout with , and it was fortunate . Man and horse went , as usual , after the race , to be weighed , and were put into the scale . They rose ...
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Common terms and phrases
Alderman amongst answer arms bastinado began Benedictines Benetto Bianca body bosom Caliph called chamber coach coachman comfort confess Corvetto Countess cruel daugh dead dear death door dreadful dream eyes face fancy father favor fear fell followed fresh gave gentleman Geronimo Ghost Grimble hand hath head heard heart Hidalgo honor hope horrible horse instantly lady legs Lincolnshire Little Agib Little Britain living Lodowic look Madame Doppeldick maid Malchen manner marriage Masetto master mean melancholy mind miserable Miss mother mouth nature never night notwithstanding Phipps Pompey poor Pryme PUGSLEY Quaker returned round Rovinello seemed short sight soon spirit stood tears Tebaldo thee thing thou thought Tom Hodges took Torrello tree truth turned uncon vetto Vincent Ball voice walking whereas whereupon whilst whist whole wife window woman words wretched young Yussuf
Popular passages
Page 82 - Oh ! ever thus, from childhood's hour, I've seen my fondest hopes decay ; I never loved a tree or flower, But 'twas the first to fade away. I never nursed a dear gazelle. To glad me with its soft black eye, But when it came to know me well, And love me, it was sure to die ! Now too — the joy most like divine Of all I ever dreamt or knew.
Page 201 - Sae true his heart, sae smooth his speech, His breath like caller air ; His very foot has music in't As he comes up the stair — And will I see his face again ? And will I hear him speak? I'm downright dizzy wi...
Page 200 - Peregrine and Gauntlet heard the sound of the stump, ascending the wooden staircase with such velocity, that they at first mistook it for the application of drumsticks to the head of an empty barrel. This uncommon speed, however, was attended with a misfortune; he chanced to overlook a small defect in one of the steps, and his prop plunging into a hole, he fell backwards, to the imminent danger of his life.
Page 28 - A decent elderly body, in decayed sables, undertook, on her part, to promote the comforts of the occupants by every suitable attention, and, as she assured me, at a very reasonable rate. So far, the nocturnal faculty had served me truly. A day-dream could not have proceeded more orderly: but alas!
Page 275 - What noise is this ? who calls Hieronimo ? " May it be done ? Pain. Yea, sir. Hier. Well, sir ; then bring me forth, bring me through alley and alley, still with a distracted countenance going along, and let my hair heave up my night-cap. Let the clouds scowl, make the moon dark, the stars extinct, the winds blowing, the bells tolling, the owls shrieking, the toads croaking, the minutes jarring, and the clock striking twelve.
Page 274 - To be too confident, is as unjust In any work, as too much to distrust ; Who from the laws of study have not swerv'd, Know begg'd applauses never were deserv'd. We must submit to censure : so doth he, Whose hours begot this issue ; yet, being free For his part, if he have not pleas'd you, then In this kind he'll not trouble you again...
Page 267 - Sticker, especially — in his most temperate moments a perfect skyblue-bodied red-faced, bowing and smirking pattern of politeness to females, was now, under the influence of good ale, a very Sir Calidore, ready to comfort and succour distressed damsels, to fight for them, live or die for them, with as much of the chivalrous spirit as remains in our times. They inquired, and I explained in a few words the lady's dilemma, taking care to forewarn them, by relating the issue of my own attempts in her...