The Works of Samuel Richardson |
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Pagina 54
... endeavour to make me , his property , will hunt me from place to place , and search after me as a stray : and he knows he may do so with impunity ; for whom have I to protect me from him ? Then as to my estate , the envied estate ...
... endeavour to make me , his property , will hunt me from place to place , and search after me as a stray : and he knows he may do so with impunity ; for whom have I to protect me from him ? Then as to my estate , the envied estate ...
Pagina 57
... endeavour to make the best of my present lot . And join with me , my best , my only friend , in praying , that my punishment may end here ; and that my present afflictions may be sanctified to me . This letter will enable you to account ...
... endeavour to make the best of my present lot . And join with me , my best , my only friend , in praying , that my punishment may end here ; and that my present afflictions may be sanctified to me . This letter will enable you to account ...
Pagina 86
... endeavour to establish iniquity by quirks , while I robbed the innocent ? You are an excellent gentleman , Sir : I wish [ and then she sighed ] I had had the happiness to know there was such a lawyer in the world ; and to have been ...
... endeavour to establish iniquity by quirks , while I robbed the innocent ? You are an excellent gentleman , Sir : I wish [ and then she sighed ] I had had the happiness to know there was such a lawyer in the world ; and to have been ...
Pagina 94
... endeavour to prevail upon her to lie down . I begged that they would not suffer her to talk ; for that she was accustomed to fits , and , when in this way , would talk of any thing that came uppermost : and the more she was suffered to ...
... endeavour to prevail upon her to lie down . I begged that they would not suffer her to talk ; for that she was accustomed to fits , and , when in this way , would talk of any thing that came uppermost : and the more she was suffered to ...
Pagina 118
... endeavour to bring about a reconciliation between Mrs. Lovelace and her friends , by means of her elder uncle , when a good understanding is wanting between your- ' selves ? ' — A fair inference , Mrs. Moore ! -A fair in- ference , Miss ...
... endeavour to bring about a reconciliation between Mrs. Lovelace and her friends , by means of her elder uncle , when a good understanding is wanting between your- ' selves ? ' — A fair inference , Mrs. Moore ! -A fair in- ference , Miss ...
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The Works of Samuel Richardson: With a Sketch of His Life and ..., Volume 11 Samuel Richardson Volledige weergave - 1811 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
acquainted answer Beelzebub believe beloved canst canst thou say Capt Captain Tomlinson cerning charmer charming Clarissa Harlowe contrivance cursed day-dawn dear creature dearest creature desired devil door Dorcas doubt endeavour excuse eyes face favour fellow forgive gentleman give go air gone gout Hampstead hand happy hear heard heart Hendon her's honour hope Jack JOHN BELFORD knew Lady Betty letter libertine lodgings look Lord Lovel Lovelace Madam marriage married mind Miss Howe's Miss Rawlins Moore never night obliged occasion once Oxfordshire passion person pleased poor present racter reconciliation resolved sake seemed seest servant soon soul spouse stept suppose sure sweet thing thou hast thou wilt thought told town turn uncle uncle's unhappy vile villain Wedn widow Bevis wife wish woman women word wretch write young your's
Populaire passages
Pagina 361 - His poppy grows among the corn. The halcyon sleep will never build his nest In any stormy breast. 'Tis not enough that he does find Clouds and darkness in the mind ; Darkness but half his work will do : 'Tis not enough ; he must find quiet too.
Pagina 319 - And the pacifying of her, and endeavouring to reconcile the lady to her, took up till near one o'clock. And thus, between terror, and the late hour, and what followed, she was diverted from the thoughts of getting out of the house to Mrs. Leeson's, or any where else. LETTER XII MR. LOVELACE, TO JOHN BELFORD, ESQ. Tuesday Morning, June 13. AND now, Belford, I can go no farther. The affair is over. Clarissa lives.
Pagina 333 - I forget which — but a bear, or a tiger, I believe it was. It was made her a present of when a whelp. She fed it with her own hand : she nursed up the wicked cub with great tenderness; and would play with it without fear or apprehension of danger: and it was obedient to all her commands: and its...
Pagina 334 - But mind what followed: at last, somehow, neglecting to satisfy its hungry maw, or having otherwise disobliged it on some occasion, it resumed its nature ; and on a sudden fell upon her, and tore her in pieces. And who was most to blame, I pray ? The brute, or the lady ? The lady, surely ! For what she did was out of nature, out of character, at least: what it did was in its own nature.
Pagina 338 - Sir, if possible, Lead me where my own thoughts themselves may lose me, Where I may doze out what I've left of life, Forget myself and this day's guilt and falsehood. Cruel remembrance, how shall I appease thee ! [Exit guarded.
Pagina 314 - ... vows, and poured forth new ones. At last, with a heart-breaking sob, I see, I see, Mr. Lovelace, in broken sentences she spoke — I see, I see — that at last — at last — I am ruined ! — Ruined, if your pity — let me implore your pity! — and down on her bosom, like a half-broken stalked lily top heavy with the over-charging dews of the morning, sunk her head, with a sigh that went to my heart.
Pagina 311 - I'll teach the dear, charming creature to emulate me in contrivance; I'll teach her to weave webs and plots against her conqueror ! I'll show her, that in her smuggling schemes she is but a spider compared to me, and that she has all this time been spinning only a cobweb.