Harry and Lucy Concluded: Being the Last Part of Early Lessons, Volume 2 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 14
Page 49
... walked away , but Lucy stood still , and said , " I believe we may have them . Mrs. Frankland told us we might have any thing in this garden that we choose ; and here she is coming back from the orchard . " " Oh ! that alters the case ...
... walked away , but Lucy stood still , and said , " I believe we may have them . Mrs. Frankland told us we might have any thing in this garden that we choose ; and here she is coming back from the orchard . " " Oh ! that alters the case ...
Page 50
... people cannot procure . She did not choose either the Pride of Holland , or the Envy of the world . Harry was quite right to adhere to his own taste : here was no trial of complai- sance 50 Harry turned back, and walked com- ...
... people cannot procure . She did not choose either the Pride of Holland , or the Envy of the world . Harry was quite right to adhere to his own taste : here was no trial of complai- sance 50 Harry turned back, and walked com- ...
Page 51
... walked off , muttering to himself , " that it was well his mistress's head was not loose , or she would give it away . " Mrs. Frankland laughed good - humour- edly at his anger . She bore with him , she said , because he was an old and ...
... walked off , muttering to himself , " that it was well his mistress's head was not loose , or she would give it away . " Mrs. Frankland laughed good - humour- edly at his anger . She bore with him , she said , because he was an old and ...
Page 53
... walked through the conservatory , where Mrs. Frankland pointed out a tree , called the Papaw tree , carica papaya , which had been brought to her lately from the West Indies . The The gen- tleman who gave it to her told her , that it ...
... walked through the conservatory , where Mrs. Frankland pointed out a tree , called the Papaw tree , carica papaya , which had been brought to her lately from the West Indies . The The gen- tleman who gave it to her told her , that it ...
Page 55
... walked on with Harry , she asked him how he knew that hot air is lighter than cold . " As you might know , " said Harry , " if you recollect a diversion we were fond of when we were children , and which I should like this minute . " He ...
... walked on with Harry , she asked him how he knew that hot air is lighter than cold . " As you might know , " said Harry , " if you recollect a diversion we were fond of when we were children , and which I should like this minute . " He ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
admired afraid afterwards air pump alum asked better boil bonnets botanic name Bridgenorth Bristol brown sugar called canal carriage clay coal cobalt colours cried Harry cried Lucy crystallisation crystals danger dear Etruria experiments father told fire flowers Frankland told furnace garden glad glass hand Harry and Lucy Harry's father hear heard heat horses invention iron knew lady laughing looked Lucy's mamma mean mill Miss Watson molasses mother never observed old gentleman Panjandrum papa passed poor printing printing press pyrometer recollect remember road round sailor sails seen side smiled sort Staffordshire standing steam boat steam engine stopped sugar house suppose sure talking tell ther thing thought tower turned understand vessel waggon walked wanted Wedgwood Wedgwood's ware West Indies wheel wind windmills wish woman words wrought iron
Popular passages
Page 151 - So he died, and she very imprudently married the barber; and there were present the Picninnies, and the Joblillies, and the Garyulies, and the Grand Panjandrum himself, with the little round button at top; and they all fell to playing the game of catch as catch can, till the gunpowder ran out at the heels of their boots.
Page 334 - This potent commander of the elements — this abridger of time and space — this magician, whose cloudy machinery has produced a change on the world, the effects of which, extraordinary as they are, are perhaps only now beginning to be felt — was not only the most profound man of science, the most successful combiner of powers and calculator of numbers, as adapted to practical purposes, — was not only one of the most generally well-informed, — but one of the best and kindest of human beings.
Page 151 - So she went into the garden to cut a cabbage-leaf to make an apple pie ; and at the same time a great she-bear coming up the street, pops its head into the shop. What, no soap...
Page 73 - They raised them out of the water, not edgeways, but with the flat part, or blade, horizontal, as you would raise a spoonful of any liquid. The use of this, as Harry perceived, was to diminish the resistance of the air against the oars, as they were moved forward, in order to replunge them in the water. His father told him, that this motion is called " feathering the oars."
Page 331 - And well, with ready hand and heart, Each task of toilsome duty taking, Did one dear inmate take her part. The last asleep, the earliest waking. Her hands each nightly couch prepared, And frugal meal on which they fared ; Unfolding spread the servet white, And decked the board with tankard bright. Through fretted hose, and garment rent, Her tiny needle deftly went, Till hateful penury, so graced, Was scarcely in their dwelling traced.
Page 331 - Through fretted hose, and garment rent, Her tiny needle deftly went, Till hateful penury, so graced, Was scarcely in their dwelling traced. With rev'rence to the old she clung, With sweet affection to the young. To her was crabbed lesson said, To her the sly petition made, To her was told each petty care, To her was lisp'd the tardy prayer, 333 What time the urchin, half undrest, And half asleep, was put to rest.
Page 334 - Watt, the man whose genius discovered the means of multiplying our national resources to a degree perhaps beyond his own stupendous powers of calculation and combination ; bringing the treasures of the abyss to the summit of the earth ; giving the feeble arm of man the momentum of an Afrite ; commanding manufactures...
Page 163 - ... could not see, for there was none. It was a dead flat, the atmosphere laden with the smell of coal and smoke. The grass, the hedges, the trees, all blackened. The hands and faces of every man, woman, and child they met, begrimed with soot ! The very sheep blackened ! not a lamb even with a lock of white wool, or a clean face. Lucy said, that it was the most frightful country she had ever beheld. Harry acknowledged, that there was nothing beautiful here to be seen ; but it was wonderful, it was...
Page 330 - She and the same man worked in the night, making a hole in the earth after lifting the boards, which they did by scratching it up with their hands not to make any noise, till she left not a nail upon her fingers, she helping the man to carry the earth as they dug it in a sheet on his back, out at the window into the garden. He then made a box at his own house large enough for her father to ly in, with bed and bed-clothes, and bored holes in the boards for air.