Gleason's Monthly Companion, Volume 3F. Gleason, 1874 |
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Page 2
... happy doing this work , and thinking who it is for . " Mrs. Colfax gazed upon her with wonder and sympathy in her eyes . The still lovely face was a mystery to her , the great , black orbs so full of emo- tion and yet so hard and ...
... happy doing this work , and thinking who it is for . " Mrs. Colfax gazed upon her with wonder and sympathy in her eyes . The still lovely face was a mystery to her , the great , black orbs so full of emo- tion and yet so hard and ...
Page 6
... happy new year to you and yours , sir , " the keeper added , as the gates swung back and the carriage passed through . " It's a large estate , isn't it ? " " Indeed it is , Charley . You may well call the hall old ; it bears antiquity ...
... happy new year to you and yours , sir , " the keeper added , as the gates swung back and the carriage passed through . " It's a large estate , isn't it ? " " Indeed it is , Charley . You may well call the hall old ; it bears antiquity ...
Page 15
... happy ; but he could not bear to see her look so pale aud weary , and to find her so often weeping . " I wish we were home again , Pierre , " Marie said to her brother one day , expressing for the first time the feeling that had long ...
... happy ; but he could not bear to see her look so pale aud weary , and to find her so often weeping . " I wish we were home again , Pierre , " Marie said to her brother one day , expressing for the first time the feeling that had long ...
Page 19
... happy hour , Marie Schwabe felt an intense emotion toward the blue - eyed child who had been the means of introducing so much of joy and hap piness into that home . " We cannot love Hilde garde too much , Carl . " Little Hildegarde ...
... happy hour , Marie Schwabe felt an intense emotion toward the blue - eyed child who had been the means of introducing so much of joy and hap piness into that home . " We cannot love Hilde garde too much , Carl . " Little Hildegarde ...
Page 21
... happy reunion , to the group gathered in the keeping - room of the cottage . Bertha and Walpurg , with their husbands and babes , had come to keep the old time festive eve under the home roof , a letter and presents from the absent ...
... happy reunion , to the group gathered in the keeping - room of the cottage . Bertha and Walpurg , with their husbands and babes , had come to keep the old time festive eve under the home roof , a letter and presents from the absent ...
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Absalom Alwina answered arms asked Barbara Barbette beautiful better brig brother cacique called captain cheek child Chromo Comegys companion cried dark daugh daughter Deacon dear Delorme door doubloons dress Eudora exclaimed eyes face Fairburn father Faust fear feel felt Floridia followed gaze gentleman girl give Grace greenwood tree Guera hair hand happy head heard heart horse hour husband Jew's harp knew lady laugh leave light lips live look Lord Luigi Marino maiden marriage married Massena mind Miss Moorish morning mother never night noble Obed once pale passed Peleg poor replied returned seemed sister smile soon stood strange sweet tell thee Therlew thing thou thought tion told tone took Topps turned Ucita uncle Ventnor voice wife wish woman words young
Popular passages
Page 228 - BE kind to each other! The night's coming on, When friend and when brother Perchance may be gone ! Then midst our dejection, How sweet to have earned The blest recollection Of kindness — returned!
Page 268 - ... vapour, which deprived him of the power of proceeding, or even calling aloud to their destroyers. He tottered back to where he had left his bride, and sinking down on the earth beside her, felt a horrid sense of despair weigh down his energies, like cowardice. Again he arose, and attempted to force his way through the entrance, and again he was compelled to relinquish the effort. He cried aloud to them — offered to surrender — and entreated that they would at least have mercy on his companion....
Page 95 - A sound economy is a sound understanding brought into action : it is calculation realized ; it is the doctrine of proportion reduced to practice : it is foreseeing consequences, and guarding against them ; it is expecting contingencies and being prepared for them.
Page 238 - ... they must be shown the door directly. 'We should dread to be born a Percy, or a Colonna, or a Bonaparte. We should not like to be the second Duke of Wellington, nor Charles Dickens, jr. It is a terrible thing, one would say, to a mind of honorable feeling, to be pointed out as somebody's son, or uncle, or granddaughter, as if the excellence were all derived. It must be a little humiliating to reflect that if your...
Page 90 - DUELLING, as a punishment, is absurd ; because it is an equal chance, whether the punishment fall upon the offender, or the person offended. Nor is it much better as a reparation : it being difficult to explain in what the satisfaction consists, or how it tends to undo the injury, or to afford a compensation for the damage already sustained. The truth is, it is not considered as either.
Page 94 - The trees shed their blossoms over our young heads, the flowers on the brink seem to offer themselves to our young hands; we are happy in hope, and we grasp eagerly at the beauties around us — but the stream hurries on, and still our hands are empty. Our course in youth and manhood is along a wider and deeper flood, amid objects more striking and magnificent.
Page 204 - A weak man in office, like a squirrel in a cage, is laboring eternally, but to no purpose, and in constant motion without getting on a jot; like a turnstile, he is in everybody's way, but stops nobody; he talks a great deal, but says very little; looks into everything, but sees into nothing; and has a hundred irons in the fire, but very few of them are hot, and with those few that are he only burns his fingers.
Page 264 - Three figures remained in a group near the door, as if listening for the sounds of pursuit ; while the revellers hurried together like startled fawns, and gazed, with countenances indicative of strong interest or wild alarm, upon the baffled warriors. " Cormac !" cried the Knight, perceiving the bridegroom among the company, " my good fellow, I missed you in an unlucky hour. These English dogs have worried us from our hold, and are still hot upon our scent. I have only time to bid my stout soldiers...
Page 90 - Other animals have neither notion nor ability to act in a similar manner, and therefore swim naturally. When a man falls into deep water, he will rise to the surface, and will continue there if he does not elevate his hands.
Page 144 - Many a child goes astray, not because there is a want of prayer or virtue at home, but simply because home lacks sunshine. A child needs smiles as much as flowers and sunbeams.