The Lady of the Manor, 4. köideHoulston and Stoneman, 1841 |
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Page 79
... walking home , her thoughts were so deeply engaged by the scenes through which she had just passed , that she scarcely heard one word of a long story which Mrs. Cicely addressed to her on certain domestic subjects in which the old ...
... walking home , her thoughts were so deeply engaged by the scenes through which she had just passed , that she scarcely heard one word of a long story which Mrs. Cicely addressed to her on certain domestic subjects in which the old ...
Page 80
... walk this day ; neither should it excite any sur- prise , though she did not immediately distinguish the agitation into which she was thrown by the prospect of her new and interesting undertaking from other feelings of a nature not to ...
... walk this day ; neither should it excite any sur- prise , though she did not immediately distinguish the agitation into which she was thrown by the prospect of her new and interesting undertaking from other feelings of a nature not to ...
Page 84
... walk ; and she had much to say about the deer in the park and as it was not needful for the party to pass the cottage in which the widow had died , the little orphan seemed not to connect any thing that was passing in the church - yard ...
... walk ; and she had much to say about the deer in the park and as it was not needful for the party to pass the cottage in which the widow had died , the little orphan seemed not to connect any thing that was passing in the church - yard ...
Page 100
... walking alone , and when you sit in silence , guiding your needle , as you may now be doing , in the favourite parlour , when the moon is shining , and the owls hooting , as I suppose they sometimes do in the neighbourhood of Mortimer ...
... walking alone , and when you sit in silence , guiding your needle , as you may now be doing , in the favourite parlour , when the moon is shining , and the owls hooting , as I suppose they sometimes do in the neighbourhood of Mortimer ...
Page 111
... walk in a re- mote and retired part of the park , holding Annette by the hand ; and , lost in melancholy reflection , having passed the more open part of the inclosure , they turned into a path leading to a deep dell or dingle , that ...
... walk in a re- mote and retired part of the park , holding Annette by the hand ; and , lost in melancholy reflection , having passed the more open part of the inclosure , they turned into a path leading to a deep dell or dingle , that ...
Other editions - View all
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