The New Monthly Belle Assemblée, Volume 13Joseph Rogerson - Fashion |
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... dream , 103 Like dewdrops to the parching flower , 49 La Terpsichore , 160 Look aloft , 326 Land of my fathers , 326 Land of my birth , 326 Idol of love , 160 Inundation , the , 160 O ye naughty , naughty men , 103 Oh , think not that I ...
... dream , 103 Like dewdrops to the parching flower , 49 La Terpsichore , 160 Look aloft , 326 Land of my fathers , 326 Land of my birth , 326 Idol of love , 160 Inundation , the , 160 O ye naughty , naughty men , 103 Oh , think not that I ...
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... Dreams of the silent night , 197 Duetto , 70 Enigmas , 199 , 249 Fairy's web , the , 128 Farewell , 80 , 265 Fisherman's daughter , the , 311 Floral thought , a , 288 Flow on thou stream , 189 Forget me not , 142 Freed prisoner , the ...
... Dreams of the silent night , 197 Duetto , 70 Enigmas , 199 , 249 Fairy's web , the , 128 Farewell , 80 , 265 Fisherman's daughter , the , 311 Floral thought , a , 288 Flow on thou stream , 189 Forget me not , 142 Freed prisoner , the ...
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... dream of one , too . I have already in imagination made such a nice little duck of a husband for myself . BAB . So have I. I have made at least a dozen little husbands for myself . But meanwhile I fancy I must console myself with my ...
... dream of one , too . I have already in imagination made such a nice little duck of a husband for myself . BAB . So have I. I have made at least a dozen little husbands for myself . But meanwhile I fancy I must console myself with my ...
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... dream of the imagination ! [ Bab . turns her back to him ; he passes softly round to her : Rich . imitates him . ] What is called ugliness in France is named beauty in Lapland . BAB . [ turning to her sister . ] Let me advise you to go ...
... dream of the imagination ! [ Bab . turns her back to him ; he passes softly round to her : Rich . imitates him . ] What is called ugliness in France is named beauty in Lapland . BAB . [ turning to her sister . ] Let me advise you to go ...
Page 13
... dreaming ! Now thou'rt again my own ! Now thou'rt again my own ! For like twin - berries parted , O'er thy rich ripe ... dreams arise , In life's fair opening years . But soon the rainbows varied ray , No longer we can find ; Thus life's ...
... dreaming ! Now thou'rt again my own ! Now thou'rt again my own ! For like twin - berries parted , O'er thy rich ripe ... dreams arise , In life's fair opening years . But soon the rainbows varied ray , No longer we can find ; Thus life's ...
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Common terms and phrases
appeared arms Barney beautiful blue bonnet bosom breath bright bright eyes brim brow Brussels lace cambric capotes cheek chemisette child colour corsage dark daughter Dauriat dear delight door dream dress exclaimed eyes fair fancy father fear feel felt flowers gaze gentle gentleman girl give Gordon Highlanders hand happy head heard heart honour hope hour husband knew lace lady light lips look Lord Lorenzo Ghiberti lover Lucian mantelet marriage Mary mind Miss Montaig morning mother muslin never night o'er organdy ornamented ostrich passed Peppercorn Phormio poor PRINCE quadrille racter RALPH redingote replied ribbon rich round Salome scene Selina sigh silk sister sleeve smile sorrow spirit sweet taig tears tell thee thou thought tion trimmed Valenciennes lace velvet voice wife William Selwyn wish woman words young youth
Popular passages
Page 98 - She, who ne'er answers till a husband cools, Or, if she rules him, never shows she rules; Charms by accepting, by submitting sways, Yet has her humour most, when she obeys...
Page 129 - Rising in fearless grace with every swell, Thou seem'st as if a spirit meekly brave Dwelt in thy cell : Lifting alike thy head Of placid beauty, feminine yet free, Whether with foam or pictured azure spread The waters be. What is like thee, fair flower, The gentle and the firm? thus bearing up To the blue sky that alabaster cup, As to the shower?
Page 267 - Well, fourteen captains came to him, and said, ' Here we are, will you now go...
Page 160 - Sir," said the baron, addressing the young gentleman, " the fault which was committed by throwing the line into confusion might, in the presence of an enemy, have been fatal ; I arrested you as its supposed author, but I have reason to believe that I was mistaken, and that, in this instance, you were blameless. I ask your pardon ; return to your command ; I would not deal unjustly toward any one, much less toward one whose character as an officer is so respectable.
Page 158 - In the winter he returned to the city ; it was in the highest state of prosperity. The number of inhabitants increased a third in a few years. Manufactures found their profit — art, honour — every one security. Never was the court more lively, more agreeable, more intellectual ; no expenditure was too great to be lavished on religious and secular festivals, on amusements and theatres, on presents and marks of favour. It was heard with pleasure that Juliano Medici, with his young wife, thought...
Page 127 - Now, let us thank the Eternal Power, convinced That Heaven but tries our virtue by affliction : That oft the cloud which wraps the present hour, Serves but to brighten all our future days ! [Eteunt onina.
Page 160 - ... Naples and Sardinia, descend only to the eldest sons in succession ; but the cadets of all these houses, though they possess neither the same titles not privileges, are nor less noble than the heads of their respective houses. The British gentry have not only been distinguished by coats of arms, but have given liveries to their retainers from time immemorial. When Henry the Fowler wished to polish the Germans, he sent commissioners to England to observe the regularity and order with which the...
Page 266 - Harold," with which she seemed quite familiar. She then asked me to give her some of my imitations of him from the " Rejected Addresses." These she did not seem quite so well to comprehend. I told her all I knew of him before he went abroad, to which, like Desdemona,
Page 92 - ... received. I shall conclude this paper, as I did my last, on the same subject, with a general remark. As they who possess less than they expected cannot be happy, to expatiate in chimerical prospects of felicity is to insure the anguish of disappointment, and to lose the power of enjoying whatever may be possessed. Let not youth, therefore, imagine, that with all the advantages of nature and education, marriage will be a constant reciprocation of delight, over which externals will have little...