Mrs Lorimer: A Sketch in Black and WhiteMacmillan, 1892 - 415 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 38
Page 4
... talk over their claret , pitied the handsome young creature , left alone in the world , with no husband to care for or child to cheer her . They deplored , too , the trouble that had fallen on Mr. Mainwaring ; for everybody , whose ...
... talk over their claret , pitied the handsome young creature , left alone in the world , with no husband to care for or child to cheer her . They deplored , too , the trouble that had fallen on Mr. Mainwaring ; for everybody , whose ...
Page 8
... talk in robust and cheerful tones of the fine seasonable weather , however intolerable the cold or penetrating the damp may be outside . If any thoughts concerning the prevalence of disease or the shortness of human life assail you , it ...
... talk in robust and cheerful tones of the fine seasonable weather , however intolerable the cold or penetrating the damp may be outside . If any thoughts concerning the prevalence of disease or the shortness of human life assail you , it ...
Page 13
... talk which this event gave rise to . I groan in spirit still when I recall it . But the history of the young couple's married life , alas ! was as sad as it was short . About a year later Robert Lorimer fell ill . deniable signs of ...
... talk which this event gave rise to . I groan in spirit still when I recall it . But the history of the young couple's married life , alas ! was as sad as it was short . About a year later Robert Lorimer fell ill . deniable signs of ...
Page 32
... . Mr. Mainwaring had a feeling of delicacy in talk- ing to his niece of her own troubles . - Politics Mr. Mainwaring had never reckoned as very well suited to the comprehension of the female mind ; and Church 32 PART I MRS . LORIMER .
... . Mr. Mainwaring had a feeling of delicacy in talk- ing to his niece of her own troubles . - Politics Mr. Mainwaring had never reckoned as very well suited to the comprehension of the female mind ; and Church 32 PART I MRS . LORIMER .
Page 33
... talk was generally of an unexciting char- acter , dealing chiefly with the land and the crops , interspersed with kindly bits of gossip about neigh- bours and parishioners , and with reminiscences of historic runs with the hounds , the ...
... talk was generally of an unexciting char- acter , dealing chiefly with the land and the crops , interspersed with kindly bits of gossip about neigh- bours and parishioners , and with reminiscences of historic runs with the hounds , the ...
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Common terms and phrases
2nd Edit 3rd Edit Adnitt afraid ALFRED AINGER answered Elizabeth asked Aunt Susan beauty beth BOOK charming CHURCH Claybrooke Rectory colour comfort cried Dean CHURCH dear delicate Edward Dadley Eliza Elizabeth Lorimer Elizabeth Mainwaring ENGLISH ESSAYS eyes F. D. MAURICE F. T. PALGRAVE face fancy Fanny Lorimer feeling flowers Frank Lorimer Fred Wharton friends Gerald Globe 8vo GOLDEN TREASURY hands Harbage heart HISTORY hope husband Illustrated J. A. SYMONDS knew lady LECTURES Leeper LETTERS live London looked Lorimer's Lowcote Mainwaring Mainwaring's marriage matter ment MICHAEL MACMILLAN mind nature never PALGRAVE Paper Edition paused person pleasant POEMS Portrait pretty PRIMER Prof quiet quietly Rector Robert Lorimer seemed sense SERMONS sewed slowly smiling sorrow speak stood strong suddenly talk things thought tion turned vols walk wife woman young
Popular passages
Page 219 - When all the world is young, lad, And all the trees are green; And every goose a swan, lad, And every lass a queen; Then hey for boot and horse, lad, And round the world away; Young blood must have its course lad, And every dog his day. When all the world is old, lad, And all the trees are brown; And all the sport is stale, lad, And all the wheels run down; Creep home, and take your place there, The spent and maimed among; God grant you find one face there, You loved when all was young.
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