Filthy lucre, Volume 72 |
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... Wife . By Wilkie Collins . Poor Miss Finch . By Wilkie Collins . Miss or Mrs. ? By Wilkie Collins . The New Magdalen . By Wilkie Collins . The Frozen Deep . By Wilkie Collins . The Law and the Lady . By Wilkie Collins . The Best of ...
... Wife . By Wilkie Collins . Poor Miss Finch . By Wilkie Collins . Miss or Mrs. ? By Wilkie Collins . The New Magdalen . By Wilkie Collins . The Frozen Deep . By Wilkie Collins . The Law and the Lady . By Wilkie Collins . The Best of ...
Page 8
... wife and two children , and nothing to depend upon but the profession which shut its doors against him ; worse - being one of those easy , happy fellows who can never say " no , " he had lent his name to a friend in temporary trouble ...
... wife and two children , and nothing to depend upon but the profession which shut its doors against him ; worse - being one of those easy , happy fellows who can never say " no , " he had lent his name to a friend in temporary trouble ...
Page 18
... wife . Nothing that he could do , or others could say of him , would persuade her that he was not a fool - and this simply because he was poor ! She respected his title of " Honourable " ( she married him for it ) ; she respected his ...
... wife . Nothing that he could do , or others could say of him , would persuade her that he was not a fool - and this simply because he was poor ! She respected his title of " Honourable " ( she married him for it ) ; she respected his ...
Page 26
... wife and child to make his home pleasant , but it was too late now - too late . Never had the lonely house and the lonely meal seemed to him so lonely . " Why on earth can't you ever put some flowers in that thing ? " he snapped ...
... wife and child to make his home pleasant , but it was too late now - too late . Never had the lonely house and the lonely meal seemed to him so lonely . " Why on earth can't you ever put some flowers in that thing ? " he snapped ...
Page 28
... wife as they entered the drawing - room , " that he really must not bury himself . We must dig him up ; ha ha ! we must dig him up . " It occurred to Probyn that if they had begun that process a few years ago , they would have found the ...
... wife as they entered the drawing - room , " that he really must not bury himself . We must dig him up ; ha ha ! we must dig him up . " It occurred to Probyn that if they had begun that process a few years ago , they would have found the ...
Common terms and phrases
acquaintance Alex ANTHONY TROLLOPE asked Belgravia BESANT and JAMES better brown lady Byngton Captain Tarrant Captain Willis Charley Willis Clanlochie clever cloth extra Coloured corner house cried Crown 8vo curate dear Demy 8vo Edited eyes Facsimile father fellow fortune friends gentleman girl give glad Guy Waterman hand happy hate heart HENRY KINGSLEY hope hundred husband JAMES PAYN James Probyn JAMES RICE Jane JOHN SAUNDERS JUSTIN MCCARTHY knew Lady Kingclerq leave lived London look married Mary Tarrant Mary's mind Miss Hornby Miss Tarrant never numerous Illustrations OUIDA pleasant poor Portrait pounds pretty Probyn's Wharf replied rich Rosey shilling Sir Albert Sir Maynard Somers soon sort spoke story sure talk tell thing thought told took tramp volume Walter Brierley wife WILKIE COLLINS Wingate Scriven wish woman word young
Popular passages
Page 10 - Cyclopaedia of Costume ; or, A Dictionary of Dress — Regal, Ecclesiastical, Civil, and Military — from the Earliest Period in England to the reign of George the Third. Including Notices of Contemporaneous Fashions on the Continent, and a General History of the Costumes of the Principal Countries of Europe. By JR PLANCHE, Somerset Herald.
Page 7 - More Worlds than One. The Creed of the Philosopher and the Hope of the Christian.
Page 29 - Plutarch's Lives of Illustrious Men. Translated from the Greek, with Notes Critical and Historical, and a Life of Plutarch, by JOHN and WILLIAM LANGHORNE.
Page 147 - Dont waste your time at family funerals grieving for your relatives: attend to life, not to death: there are as good fish in the sea as ever came out of it, and better.
Page 15 - Greenwood's Wilds of London: Descriptive Sketches, from Personal Observations and Experience, of Remarkable Scenes, People, and Places in London.
Page 36 - Sheridan's Complete Works, with Life and Anecdotes. Including his Dramatic Writings, printed from the Original Editions, his Works in Prose and Poetry, Translations, Speeches, Jokes, Puns, &c. With a Collection of Sheridaniana. Crown 8vo, Cloth extra, gilt, with 10 fullpage Tinted Illustrations, 7s.
Page 22 - Magna Charta. An exact Facsimile of the Original Document in the British Museum, printed on fine plate paper, nearly 3 feet long by 2 feet wide, with the Arms and Seals emblazoned in Gold and Colours. Price 5s. The Roll of Battle Abbey...
Page 40 - Warrant to Execute Charles I. An exact Facsimile of this important Document, with the Fifty-nine Signatures of the Regicides, and corresponding Seals. Beautifully printed on paper to imitate the Original MS., price 2s.
Page 13 - Drawing' were unrivalled^ in masterfulness of touch since Rembrandt (in some qualities of delineation, unrivalled even by him). . . . To make somewhat enlarged copies of them, looking at them through a magnifying glass, and never putting two lines where Cruikshank has put only one, would be an exercise in decision and severe drawing which would leave afterwards little to be learnt in schools.
Page 20 - Longfellow's Complete Prose Works. Including "Outre Mer," "Hyperion," " Kavanagh," "The Poets and Poetry of Europe," and