Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 104W. Blackwood, 1868 |
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Pagina 4
... hand were so far from being bound to offer their assistance that the very master of the house , posted oppo- site to her , might not act as her crou- pier ; his department was to push the bottle after dinner . As for the crowd of guests ...
... hand were so far from being bound to offer their assistance that the very master of the house , posted oppo- site to her , might not act as her crou- pier ; his department was to push the bottle after dinner . As for the crowd of guests ...
Pagina 17
... hand in the verses to the Imitator of Horace , with virulence at least equal to his own ; and even if guiltless in ... hands , " he will not only gratify his malice but increase his fortune by these means , and so she hopes she will see ...
... hand in the verses to the Imitator of Horace , with virulence at least equal to his own ; and even if guiltless in ... hands , " he will not only gratify his malice but increase his fortune by these means , and so she hopes she will see ...
Pagina 42
... hand - in her left a cornucopia . We have availed ourselves of this image in translating " manentem . " " Biremis scapha , " a two - oared boat , rowed by a single rower . - ORELLI . commenced . But in translation the expression and ...
... hand - in her left a cornucopia . We have availed ourselves of this image in translating " manentem . " " Biremis scapha , " a two - oared boat , rowed by a single rower . - ORELLI . commenced . But in translation the expression and ...
Pagina 46
... hand and took up at random a piece of music from the heap that lay all round her in the wildest confusion . She never kept anything in its place , and al- ways had to trust to instinct to find what she wanted . The piece to which her hand ...
... hand and took up at random a piece of music from the heap that lay all round her in the wildest confusion . She never kept anything in its place , and al- ways had to trust to instinct to find what she wanted . The piece to which her hand ...
Pagina 52
... hand , to be despised by Grace as a mere fortune - seeker , as a man with- out the most ordinary notions of honour , to be utterly degraded in the opinion of all his friends , to be contemptible even to himself could he bear this ...
... hand , to be despised by Grace as a mere fortune - seeker , as a man with- out the most ordinary notions of honour , to be utterly degraded in the opinion of all his friends , to be contemptible even to himself could he bear this ...
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Antonia army asked Badger Balaklava Ballyragget Baroni beautiful believe Bunsen Burridge called character Church course Disraeli doubt England English eyes favour feel felt Florence French give Gladstone Government Grace guns hand happy heard heart honour hope Horace House House of Commons idea Ireland Italy King land leader least less letter live look Lord Lord Derby Lord George Bentinck Lord John Russell Lord Palmerston Lord Raglan Madame Olivieri Magdala Marcelli Marco means ment mind Minister Naples nature ness never once opinion Parliament party passed Peel perhaps poet political poor Pope present Prince Queen Reform religious Sebastopol seems ship side Signor sion Sir Robert Peel soul speak spirit suppose tell Theodorus thing thought tion took Tories truth Wesley Weston Whigs whole wife woman word writes young