Not Like Other Girls: A Novel, Том 2Richard Bentley and Son, 1884 |
Из књиге
Резултати 1-5 од 66
Страница 3
... looked up for an instant from her prayer - book . Even Mrs. Cheyne roused from the gloomy abstraction which was her usual approach to devotion , and looked long and curiously at the three girlish faces before her . It was refreshing ...
... looked up for an instant from her prayer - book . Even Mrs. Cheyne roused from the gloomy abstraction which was her usual approach to devotion , and looked long and curiously at the three girlish faces before her . It was refreshing ...
Страница 4
... little thrills of excite- ment , of impatience , of repressed amusement , pervaded her mind , as she looked at the strange faces round her . They would not be long strange , ' she thought ; ' some 4 Not like other Girls .
... little thrills of excite- ment , of impatience , of repressed amusement , pervaded her mind , as she looked at the strange faces round her . They would not be long strange , ' she thought ; ' some 4 Not like other Girls .
Страница 5
... looked like a young princess who was playing at Arcadia . Would people ever dare to ask her to work for them ? Would they not beg her pardon , and cry shame on themselves for entertaining such a thought for a moment ? Phillis almost ...
... looked like a young princess who was playing at Arcadia . Would people ever dare to ask her to work for them ? Would they not beg her pardon , and cry shame on themselves for entertaining such a thought for a moment ? Phillis almost ...
Страница 6
... looked at Phillis . Something in the girl's keen - eyed glance seemed to move her strangely . The colour crept into her pale face , and her lip quivered ; a moment after- wards she drew down her veil and leaned back in her seat , and ...
... looked at Phillis . Something in the girl's keen - eyed glance seemed to move her strangely . The colour crept into her pale face , and her lip quivered ; a moment after- wards she drew down her veil and leaned back in her seat , and ...
Страница 7
... looked at us ; I am sure he did , mother . was quite a tirade against dress and vanity ; but I am sure no one could find fault with us . ' ' It was a very good sermon , and I think he seems a very clever young man , ' returned Mrs ...
... looked at us ; I am sure he did , mother . was quite a tirade against dress and vanity ; but I am sure no one could find fault with us . ' ' It was a very good sermon , and I think he seems a very clever young man , ' returned Mrs ...
Друга издања - Прикажи све
Чести термини и фразе
afraid answer Archie's asked Phillis Atalanta Barby battledore and shuttlecock began Bonnie Dundee Braidwood Road butcher's wife Cheyne Cheyne's clergyman Colonel Cottage Dancy dark darlings Dick's door Dorothy dreadfully dress dressmakers Dulce Dulce's Ellis Burton exclaimed eyes face father feel fellow felt Friary girls glance Grace Hadleigh hand head heart Isabel kind knew Laddie laugh Magdalene mammie manner Mattie Mayne mean mind Miss Challoner Miss Drummond Miss Mewlstone Miss Middleton Miss Milner morning mother Nan's ness never nice observed Phillis Oh dear Oh yes once parlour Phillis's poor pretty replied Phillis returned Archie returned Dick returned Nan returned Phillis Richard Mayne seemed sigh sister smile sort Squails stood storm stranger sure sweet talk tell Thank thing thought tired to-night told tone took Trimmings turned uttered voice wait walk wanted White House woman wonder word young lady
Популарни одломци
Страница 119 - My good blade carves the casques of men, My tough lance thrusteth sure, My strength is as the strength of ten, Because my heart is pure.
Страница 215 - Alas! they had been friends in youth; But whispering tongues can poison truth; And constancy lives in realms above; And life is thorny; and youth is vain; And to be wroth with one we love Doth work like madness in the brain.
Страница 120 - How sweet are looks that ladies bend On whom their favours fall! For them I battle till the end, To save from shame and thrall: But all my heart is drawn above, My knees are bow'd in crypt and shrine: I never felt the kiss of love, Nor maiden's hand in mine.
Страница 284 - But the precept is understood to be subject to large exceptions. Its real use is to warn us against the abuse of the more popular adage that " a man has a right to do as he likes with his own " (c), which errs much more dangerously on the other side.
Страница 120 - So pass I hostel, hall, and grange; By bridge and ford, by park and pale, All armed I ride, whate'er betide, Until I find the Holy Grail.
Страница 124 - But, my dear, there was no need to be so literal,' returned Mrs. Challoner reprovingly; for she was a gentlewoman of the old school, and nothing grieved her more than slipshod English, or any idiom or idiotcy of modern parlance in the mouths of her bright young daughters; to speak of any young man except Dick without the ceremonious prefix was a heinous misdemeanour in her eyes. Dulce would occasionally trespass, and was always rebuked with much gravity. ' You could have said
Страница 177 - I have come to ask you if you will be good enough to make me a dress,' she said, with a charming smile.