More Pages from a Journal: With Other PapersOxford University Press, 1910 - 303 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-5 van 47
Pagina 1
... father married again. The second wife was a widow, good-looking but hard, and had a temper. She made herself very disagreeable to Miss Teller, and the husband took the wife's part. Miss Toller therefore left the farm at Barton Sluice ...
... father married again. The second wife was a widow, good-looking but hard, and had a temper. She made herself very disagreeable to Miss Teller, and the husband took the wife's part. Miss Toller therefore left the farm at Barton Sluice ...
Pagina 13
... father and mother and sister; mother and sister now dead. Somebody walked home with her that clear, frosty night. Strange! Miss Toller, Brighton lodging-house keeper, always in black gown —-no speck of colour even on Sundays— whose life ...
... father and mother and sister; mother and sister now dead. Somebody walked home with her that clear, frosty night. Strange! Miss Toller, Brighton lodging-house keeper, always in black gown —-no speck of colour even on Sundays— whose life ...
Pagina 28
... father :— 'MY DEAR MARY,—This is to tell you that your stepmother departed this life last Tuesday fortnight. She was taken with a fit on the Sunday. On Tuesday morning she came to herself and wished us to send for the parson. He was ...
... father :— 'MY DEAR MARY,—This is to tell you that your stepmother departed this life last Tuesday fortnight. She was taken with a fit on the Sunday. On Tuesday morning she came to herself and wished us to send for the parson. He was ...
Pagina 31
... father's forefathers for two hundred years or more, and my father's old house has been in our family nearly as long. I could not live in London; but I ought not to talk in this way, for I hold it to be wrong to set anybody against what ...
... father's forefathers for two hundred years or more, and my father's old house has been in our family nearly as long. I could not live in London; but I ought not to talk in this way, for I hold it to be wrong to set anybody against what ...
Pagina 32
... father and mother. When you were going to be married what agony I went through! It was so wicked of me, for it was jealousy with no cause. I thank God you love me as much as ever. I wish I could see you again at Homerton, but the ...
... father and mother. When you were going to be married what agony I went through! It was so wicked of me, for it was jealousy with no cause. I thank God you love me as much as ever. I wish I could see you again at Homerton, but the ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Antony’s asked AXMOUTH beautiful believe better Bicknoller Blackdeep blue Borachio called Charles Charlotte Bronte church Claudio Cleeve Abbey clouds Coleridge creatures dark daughter dear death definite difficulty dinner Eastcheap Esther excuse eyes father feel fields find fine finished fire first fit friends girl Goacher Godwin gone happiness hear heard heart Helen Hero HOMERTON hour husband infinite Jackman Kate knew lady Larkins live London look Lord Malvolio marriage married matter Melissa miles mind Miss Everard Miss Taggart Miss Toller moral morning mother Mudge Mudge’s Nether Stowey never night o’clock office once Othello passion perhaps person play Plutarch Poulter Radcliffe reason reflected religion replied satisfied Shakespeare soul sufficient Sunday talk tell thing Thirty-Nine Articles thought tion told took true truth walked wife wind window woman word Wordsworth worse