The Lady of the Manor, 4. köideHoulston and Stoneman, 1841 |
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Page 5
... passed before us , to shew their spiritual nature and tendency ; and not only to prove that we are con- demned by each , but also to explain the faultless obe- dience which is required of every individual - an obe- dience which no mere ...
... passed before us , to shew their spiritual nature and tendency ; and not only to prove that we are con- demned by each , but also to explain the faultless obe- dience which is required of every individual - an obe- dience which no mere ...
Page 14
... passed unobserved , in ge- neral , by those about him ; and if his masters and school- fellows thought of him at all , it was merely as of an harmless , inoffensive little fellow , who had nothing in him . To be thought harmless and ...
... passed unobserved , in ge- neral , by those about him ; and if his masters and school- fellows thought of him at all , it was merely as of an harmless , inoffensive little fellow , who had nothing in him . To be thought harmless and ...
Page 17
... passing between Parnel and Stephens , the latter had to endure several blows from Parnel's adversaries ; from which blows he only at- tempted to defend himself by keeping them off from his face , and by saying to the ringleader , " Let ...
... passing between Parnel and Stephens , the latter had to endure several blows from Parnel's adversaries ; from which blows he only at- tempted to defend himself by keeping them off from his face , and by saying to the ringleader , " Let ...
Page 23
... passed through the same precise train of instruction as himself ; neither can he believe that there may be other constitutions and modes of discipline , both in church and state , which may have some excellencies , though they differ ...
... passed through the same precise train of instruction as himself ; neither can he believe that there may be other constitutions and modes of discipline , both in church and state , which may have some excellencies , though they differ ...
Page 26
... passed through the Univer- sity very quietly , and remained there till he was of age to be ordained , when a curacy became vacant in the very parish in which he had resided from a child . Edmund heard of this , and instantly wrote to ...
... passed through the Univer- sity very quietly , and remained there till he was of age to be ordained , when a curacy became vacant in the very parish in which he had resided from a child . Edmund heard of this , and instantly wrote to ...
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The Lady of the Manor: Being a Series of Conversations on the Subject of ... Sherwood No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
added Amelia answer appeared Ariadne aunt ayah baronet beautiful beloved brielle Calcutta called carriage Cawnpore character child Christian Cicely Clara Clifton Castle daugh daughter dear death door Edmund Stephens endeavoured expression eyes father feelings Fortescue Frederick Falconer Gabrielle gentleman girl give hall hand happy hear heard heart Holy hope humble James Horton Julia kind Lady Augusta Lady Frances little Annette little Flora looked Lord Madame de Roseau manner marriage Mary Stephens mean mind Miss Atkins Miss Beaumont Miss Carrisforth Miss Chatterton Miss Clifford Miss Crawford Miss Mortimer morning mother never occasion passed Patterson persons pious present pupil racter religion remark rendered respect Robert Lambert Sackville servant Sir Anthony Sir James Sir Robert soon speak spirit Squire tears tell thing thought tion took tutor verandah violent wish woman young lady