The day dreams of a sleepless man |
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Page 114
... winter is content to creep along the earth with collards and Scotch kale , the garden of the French peasant is made to produce , from season to season , a variety of vegetables fit for a rich man's table . If the French peasant has not ...
... winter is content to creep along the earth with collards and Scotch kale , the garden of the French peasant is made to produce , from season to season , a variety of vegetables fit for a rich man's table . If the French peasant has not ...
Page 116
... winter salad ? Why do we know nothing of the black winter radish ( radix noir d'hiver ) , from which so piquant a sauce for steaks may be made ? And why , at the winter of the year , when asparagus is not , and sea kale is worth a ...
... winter salad ? Why do we know nothing of the black winter radish ( radix noir d'hiver ) , from which so piquant a sauce for steaks may be made ? And why , at the winter of the year , when asparagus is not , and sea kale is worth a ...
Page 141
... tion of the charms of winter ; but , alas ! I might just as well have harangued a martyr at the stake on the merits of a sea - coal fire . It was in vain that I exhorted him out of the poets , for OF A SLEEPLESS MAN . 141.
... tion of the charms of winter ; but , alas ! I might just as well have harangued a martyr at the stake on the merits of a sea - coal fire . It was in vain that I exhorted him out of the poets , for OF A SLEEPLESS MAN . 141.
Page 142
... winter to my heart's con- tent . " When I reminded him that Thomson had said , on the approach of winter , - 66 ' Welcome , kindred glooms , Congenial horrors , hail ! " he replied that , for his part , he did not think hail was a ...
... winter to my heart's con- tent . " When I reminded him that Thomson had said , on the approach of winter , - 66 ' Welcome , kindred glooms , Congenial horrors , hail ! " he replied that , for his part , he did not think hail was a ...
Page 143
... winter most who have known him least . By this time we were far advanced on our road , and could see Marquise in the valley below us . About halfway between us and Marquise a by - road crossed at right angles that on which we were ...
... winter most who have known him least . By this time we were far advanced on our road , and could see Marquise in the valley below us . About halfway between us and Marquise a by - road crossed at right angles that on which we were ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abbeville admiration Adventures almanac Ambleteuse ancient aphides Arras auberge Author BARBARA HUTTON barber's battle of Crécy beautiful birds Bishop Boulogne Boulonnais bourrique boys British candle charming chops church cloth elegant coloured Concours Condette cottages Count of Boulogne crowd dance Desvres England English Entomologist eyes Fairy fancy favourite Fcap France French friends garden gendarme gilt edges girls hand HARRISON WEIR Hesdin hills History Illustrations Imperial 16mo Indifferent insects Lady lady-bird lived looked Lord Maire Marquise Marshal MacMahon Matthieu Laensberg ment Moneyspinner morning never once parish passed peasant Petit poem poet Post 8vo préfet Procureur road round Saint Fouettard Saint Nicholas Sainte Chandelle season Second Edition Shillings and Sixpence sleep Sleepless snow sparrow Stories Super Royal 16mo Tale Third Edition thought tion told tomtit town turkeys valley Véritable walk whilst winter young Zadkiel
Popular passages
Page 3 - Sleepless! and soon the small birds' melodies Must hear, first uttered from my orchard trees; And the first cuckoo's melancholy cry. Even thus last night, and two nights more, I lay, And could not win thee, Sleep! by any stealth: So do not let me wear...
Page 4 - STODDART. 2. MRS. LEICESTER'S SCHOOL. By CHARLES and MARY LAMB. 3. THE HISTORY OF THE ROBINS. By MRS. TRIMMER. 4. MEMOIR OF BOB, THE SPOTTED TERRIER. 5. KEEPER'S TRAVELS IN SEARCH OF HIS MASTER. 6. THE SCOTTISH ORPHANS. By LADY STODDART. 7. NEVER WRONG; or, THE YOUNG DISPUTANT; and "IT WAS ONLY IN FUN." 8. THE LIFE AND PERAMBULATIONS OF A MOUSE. 9. EASY INTRODUCTION TO THE KNOWLEDGE OF NATURE. By MRS. TRIMMER. 10. RIGHT AND WRONG. By the Author of
Page 255 - By SAMUEL MOSSMAN. Modern British Plutarch (The), or LIVES OF MEN DISTINGUISHED IN THE RECENT HISTORY OF OUR COUNTRY FOR THEIR TALENTS, VIRTUES, AND ACHIEVEMENTS. By WC TAYLOR, LL.D.
Page 258 - Wanderers ; Or, the Adventures of Carlos and Antonio; embracing interesting Descriptions of the Manners and Customs of the Western Tribes, and the Natural Productions of the Country.
Page 4 - Thousand. Featherland; or, How THE BIRDS LIVED AT GREENLAWN. By GM FENN. 4th Thousand. Humble Life : a Tale of HUMBLE HOMES. By the Author of " Gerty and May,
Page 249 - Mission from Cape Coast Castle to Ashantee. WITH A DESCRIPTIVE ACCOUNT OF THAT KINGDOM. By the late T. EDWARD BOWDICH, ESQ.
Page 2 - Upside Down : a Series of Amusing Pictures from Sketches by the late W. McCoNNELL, with Verses by THOMAS HOOD.
Page 135 - Beauty is Nature's brag, and must be shown In courts, at feasts, and high solemnities, Where most may wonder at the workmanship. It is for homely features to keep home ; They had their name thence: coarse complexions And cheeks of sorry grain will serve to ply The sampler, and to tease the huswife's wool.
Page 245 - Emblems of Christian Life. Illustrated by W. HARRY ROGERS, in One Hundred Original Designs, from the Writings of the Fathers, Old English Poets, &c. Printed by Whittingham. with Borders and Initials in Red. Square 8vo. price 10s.
Page 8 - A Word to the Wise, or HINTS ON THE CURRENT IMPROPRIETIES OF EXPRESSION IN WRITING AND SPEAKING. By PARRY GWYNNE. Thirteenth Thousand. 18mo, price Gd. sewed ; or is. cloth, gilt edges. " All who wish to mind their p's and cfs should consult this little volume.