The Rose of Sharon: A Religious SouvenirA. Tompkins and B. B. Mussey, 1857 |
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Página 20
... father contemplates an earlier return home than he intended when I last saw him ; and that your visit to Rome will I shall be in September , instead of November . by that time be familiar with all the works that can interest you ; and I ...
... father contemplates an earlier return home than he intended when I last saw him ; and that your visit to Rome will I shall be in September , instead of November . by that time be familiar with all the works that can interest you ; and I ...
Página 25
... father treats you with full confidence , and , as I judge , is relieved from a duty not suit- able to his age and delicate health , when you escort her to places of interest , you should not fail to press your services upon her : if she ...
... father treats you with full confidence , and , as I judge , is relieved from a duty not suit- able to his age and delicate health , when you escort her to places of interest , you should not fail to press your services upon her : if she ...
Página 31
... to our home ; when , I trust , your father will hear among his friends such report of me as will satisfy his anxiety for your welfare . The unspeakable happiness I have enjoyed I - 1 when we have been together , the THE THREE RIVALS . 31.
... to our home ; when , I trust , your father will hear among his friends such report of me as will satisfy his anxiety for your welfare . The unspeakable happiness I have enjoyed I - 1 when we have been together , the THE THREE RIVALS . 31.
Página 33
... love can enable me . I shall before the end of next week . Present my best regards to your father . I presume that if you think favorably of my see you THE ROSE OF SHARON . suit , you will immediately THE THREE RIVALS . 33333.
... love can enable me . I shall before the end of next week . Present my best regards to your father . I presume that if you think favorably of my see you THE ROSE OF SHARON . suit , you will immediately THE THREE RIVALS . 33333.
Página 37
... father's hand , requesting him to read it , and consider it well before advising me . I know his views : you have anticipated all that he can say . But I have no doubt that all will be satisfactory to him . Elliot , whom we have known ...
... father's hand , requesting him to read it , and consider it well before advising me . I know his views : you have anticipated all that he can say . But I have no doubt that all will be satisfactory to him . Elliot , whom we have known ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Althing asked assured beautiful bright bright eyes CHARLES ELLIOT cheek child cholera cold Constance Courtland crazy Jane daugh DEAR ELLIOT doctor door dream earth Edward Ellerby Estcott exclaimed eyes face father favor fear feel felt FLORENCE flowers friendship gaze girl hand happy heart heaven HENRY BACON honor hope hour Husband and Wife Iceland labor lady Lena letters light lips live look Lucy Lulu Lysippus Mapleside Marion Lee ment mind mingled Miss model family morning mother never o'er pale passed poor present Puffer quiet replied Rome ROSE OF SHARON sea of glass seemed shovel hat sleep smile song soon sorrow soul spirit sweet tears tell thee thing thou thought tion toil trust turned utter village violet bank voice weary woman words YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY young youth Zanoni
Pasajes populares
Página 259 - And I saw as it were a sea of glass mingled with fire : and them that had gotten the victory over the beast, and over his image, and over his mark, and over the number of his name, stand on the sea of glass, having the harps of God.
Página 264 - How pure at heart and sound in head, With what divine affections bold Should be the man whose thought would hold An hour's communion with the dead. In vain shalt thou, or any, call The spirits from their golden day, Except, like them, thou too canst say, My spirit is at peace with all.
Página 264 - Except, like them, thou too canst say My spirit is at peace with all. They haunt the silence of the breast, Imaginations calm and fair, The memory like a cloudless air, t The conscience as a sea at rest...
Página 91 - OH never another dream can be Like that early dream of ours, When the fairy Hope lay down to sleep, Like a child, among the flowers.
Página 211 - All things are full of labor; man cannot utter it: the eye is not satisfied with seeing, nor the ear filled with hearing. The thing that hath been, it is that which shall be; and that which is done is that which shall be done: and there is no new thing under the sun.
Página 255 - Kich and low, the wild strain gushes From her slender throat ; Every bird its carol hushes As her trancing note Mingles with the fountain's silvery play. Lone, unconscious, thus she wiles away Ever, evermore, Life in musings on Zanoni, The Seeker of the Stars. Ah, sweet maid ! give o'er thy dreaming Of the youthful sage ! Shun the light forbidden, gleaming From the mystic page Of his volumes weird and old ! Waken ! there is peril, danger, In his glance, his smile ; Wed thee with the English stranger...
Página 257 - Now a new, divine emotion, Fathomlessly deep, Wakes thy bosom, like the ocean, Nevermore to sleep ; Never to be banished thence, — Never, until thought and sense, Lost forevermore, Die to earth and to Zanoni, The Seeker of the Stars. When thy song's full tide was filling Life's diviner part, Like a flash electric, thrilling All the thousands' heart, — Did not his smile wake thy wondrous power When, thy radiant robes around thee, All the mighty throng.
Página 256 - Else ! betake thee, silent, lonely, To thy chamber still, Though thy father's spirit, only, Crosses now the sill By the living crossed of yore ! Though no eyes, save his, now meet thee By the twilight hearth ; Though no voice but his may greet thee, Nor, in song nor mirth, Friend or lover cometh more, Linger there and shut thy door Closely evermore, Ere glides in the pale Zanoni, The Seeker of the Stars. Warning vain ! thy heart is fated ! Thine is woman's lot ! By thy side Love long has waited,...
Página 256 - As her trancing note Mingles with the fountain's silvery play. Lone, unconscious, thus she wiles away Ever, evermore, Life in musings on Zanoni, The Seeker of the Stars. Ah, sweet maid ! give o'er thy dreaming Of the youthful sage ! Shun the light forbidden, gleaming From the mystic page Of his volumes weird and old ! Waken ! there is peril, danger, In his glance, his smile ; Wed thee with the English stranger — He will not beguile. Though his lips be sometimes cold, He is yet of mortal mould ;...
Página 120 - did they not speak in tongues ? " Yes, but they did not learn anything, unless there was an interpreter present. The Apostle Paul said, he had rather speak five words, with his understanding, than ten thousand words in an unknown tongue.