Clarissa: A Novel, Volume 1Tinsley, 1868 |
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Pagina xxii
... reasons have to be invented to account for their incapacity . In letters , too , the verbiage is irksome . We do not care to read the compliments with which they begin and end ; nor are we interested in hearing by what conveyance they ...
... reasons have to be invented to account for their incapacity . In letters , too , the verbiage is irksome . We do not care to read the compliments with which they begin and end ; nor are we interested in hearing by what conveyance they ...
Pagina xxxvi
... and insensible lady , whose reason is for several days paralysed by the powerful opiates which have been administered to her , Lovelace , assured of his theory that once subdued a woman is always subdued , insists xxxvi Introduction .
... and insensible lady , whose reason is for several days paralysed by the powerful opiates which have been administered to her , Lovelace , assured of his theory that once subdued a woman is always subdued , insists xxxvi Introduction .
Pagina l
... reason . " I am more and more charmed with your Clarissa , " she says ; " it is indeed a noble character ; but , I fear , nowhere to be met with ex- cept in your letters . What a pity it is you are not a woman , and blest with means of ...
... reason . " I am more and more charmed with your Clarissa , " she says ; " it is indeed a noble character ; but , I fear , nowhere to be met with ex- cept in your letters . What a pity it is you are not a woman , and blest with means of ...
Pagina liv
... reason that separates himself from his dog . In the reckoning of magnitude there is some- thing to be said for the heart . Richardson had a great heart . He nursed the consciousness of in- tense feeling , as men of high intellect nurse ...
... reason that separates himself from his dog . In the reckoning of magnitude there is some- thing to be said for the heart . Richardson had a great heart . He nursed the consciousness of in- tense feeling , as men of high intellect nurse ...
Pagina lv
... reason of the narrative skill wherewith he has carried us to the deeps of the heart , and tossed us to and fro on billows of feeling , which are known full well in life , but which few besides himself have dared to navigate in fiction ...
... reason of the narrative skill wherewith he has carried us to the deeps of the heart , and tossed us to and fro on billows of feeling , which are known full well in life , but which few besides himself have dared to navigate in fiction ...
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
angry answer apprehension April 12 asked assure aunt Hervey behaviour Belford believe Bella brother and sister character child Clary command comply cousin creature daughter dear dearest declared door doubt Dover Street duty escritoire expect eyes father favour friends gentleman girl give hand Hannah HARLOWE TO MISS hear heard heart Hickman honour hope Jules Janin knew leave letter libertine live single looked Lord M.'s Lovelace Lovelace's madam mamma marriage marry mind MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE morning mother never niece night obliged occasion offer once parlour passion person pleased present proposal reason receive relations resolution resolved Richardson seems sent servant Sir Charles Grandison Soho Square Solmes Solmes's soon suppose sure tell thee thing thou thought tion told uncle Antony uncle Harlowe unhappy violence Wednesday wish woman word wretch write young
Populaire passages
Pagina xiv - Thou didst swear to me upon a parcelgilt goblet, sitting in my Dolphin-chamber, at the round table, by a sea-coal fire, upon Wednesday in Whitsunweek, when the prince broke thy head for liking his father to a singing-man of Windsor, — thou didst swear to me then, as I was washing thy wound, to marry me, and make me my lady thy wife.
Pagina xiv - Keech, the butcher's wife, come in then and call me gossip Quickly ? coming in to borrow a mess of vinegar ; telling us she had a good dish of prawns ; whereby thou didst desire to eat some ; whereby I told thee they were ill for a green wound...
Pagina xlvi - It requires a reader to be in some degree acquainted with the huge folios of inanity, over which our ancestors yawned themselves to sleep, ere he can estimate the delight they must have experienced from this unexpected return to truth and nature.
Pagina v - Clarissa with me : and, as soon as they began to read, the whole station was in a passion of excitement about Miss Harlowe and her misfortunes, and her scoundrelly Lovelace ! The Governor's wife seized the book, and the Secretary waited for it, and the Chief Justice could not read it for tears...
Pagina 49 - I do so ; and cannot own any of the glow, any of the throbs you mention. — Upon my word, I will repeat, I cannot. And yet the passages in my letter, upon which you are so humorously severe, lay me fairly open to your agreeable raillery. I own they do. And I cannot tell what turn my mind had taken to dictate so oddly to my pen.
Pagina l - The delicious meal I made of Miss Byron on Sunday last has given me an appetite for another slice of her, off from the spit, before she is served up to the public table. If about five o'clock to-morrow afternoon will not be inconvenient, Mrs. Brown and I will come and piddle upon a bit more of her; but pray let your whole family, with Mrs. Richardson at the head of them, come in for their share.
Pagina 107 - I will not therefore sully my paper with them. But is it not a confounded thing to be in love with one, who is the daughter, the sister, the niece, of a family, I must eternally despise ? And, the devil of it, that love increasing with her — what shall I call it ? — 'Tis not scorn : — 'Tis not pride : — 'Tis not the insolence of an adored beauty : — But 'tis to virtue, it seems, that my difficulties are...
Pagina 58 - Sister, said he, I have a curiosity to show you. I will fetch it. And away he went; shutting the door close after him. I saw what all this was for. I arose; the man hemming up for a speech, rising and beginning to set his splay feet [indeed, my dear, the man in all his ways is hateful to me !] in an approaching posture.
Pagina 135 - Heigh-ho! (mocking me, for I sighed to be thus fooled with,) and do you sigh, love? — Well then, as it will be a solemn wedding, what think you of black velvet, child? — Silent still, Clary? — Black velvet, so fair as you are, with those charming eyes, gleaming through a wintry cloud, like an April sun! — Does not Lovelace tell you they are charming eyes? — How lovely will you appear to every one! — What! silent still, love? — But about your laces, Clary?
Pagina 129 - I say too explicit) that were he now but a moral man, I would prefer him to all the men I ever saw. So that this is but conditional liking still, you'll say : nor, I hope, is it more. I never was in love as it is called ; and whether this be it, or not, I must submit to you.