Our Village: Sketches of Rural Character and Scenery. 4. SeriesE. Bliss, 1830 |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–5 od 34
Stran 24
... months , and as for you , you'll look like a boy all the days of your life . You play Tragedy ! Why you're hardly tall enough for Punch . Child indeed ! And I almost sixteen ! Never come near me again , Mr. Long , I have nothing to say ...
... months , and as for you , you'll look like a boy all the days of your life . You play Tragedy ! Why you're hardly tall enough for Punch . Child indeed ! And I almost sixteen ! Never come near me again , Mr. Long , I have nothing to say ...
Stran 27
... month before , set down . as lovers - Letty Dale , the pretty daughter of the jolly old tanner , and Paul Holton , a rich young yeoman , on a visit in the place . Letty's angry speech will sufficiently explain their mutual provo- cation ...
... month before , set down . as lovers - Letty Dale , the pretty daughter of the jolly old tanner , and Paul Holton , a rich young yeoman , on a visit in the place . Letty's angry speech will sufficiently explain their mutual provo- cation ...
Stran 36
... month after the bells of Ha- zelby church were ringing merrily in honour of one of the fairest and luckiest matches that ever cricketer lost and won . CHILDREN OF THE VILLAGE . AMY LLOYD . ONE fine sunshiny March morning , a lady ...
... month after the bells of Ha- zelby church were ringing merrily in honour of one of the fairest and luckiest matches that ever cricketer lost and won . CHILDREN OF THE VILLAGE . AMY LLOYD . ONE fine sunshiny March morning , a lady ...
Stran 51
... cluster of cottages , all but the roofs and chimneys concealed by a grove of oaks ; the woody back - ground , and the blue hills in the distance , all so flowery and bowery in the pleasant month o PATTY'S NEW HAT . 51 PATTY'S NEW HAT.
... cluster of cottages , all but the roofs and chimneys concealed by a grove of oaks ; the woody back - ground , and the blue hills in the distance , all so flowery and bowery in the pleasant month o PATTY'S NEW HAT . 51 PATTY'S NEW HAT.
Stran 52
... month o May ; the nightingales singing ; the bells ringing ; and the porch itself , around which a honeysuckle in full bloom was wreathing its sweet flowers , giving out such an odour in the rain , as in dry weather nothing but the ...
... month o May ; the nightingales singing ; the bells ringing ; and the porch itself , around which a honeysuckle in full bloom was wreathing its sweet flowers , giving out such an odour in the rain , as in dry weather nothing but the ...
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
Aberleigh Alderney amongst Andrew Shore Anne aunt beautiful Berkshire birds blue boat bright called Charles Foster Clewer cobbler colour comfort cottage cousin cricket Dame damsel Danby Dash daughter dear delight Dennis O'Brien doll Elvington eyes fair fancy Fanny farm farmer father favourite Flossy flowers garden gentleman George ghost green greenhouse half Ham House hand Hannah happy Harry Hatherden Hazelby heard heart Hetta honour Humph lady Lanton laugh Laura Letty little girl lived look magpie Major Barton married Martha Master Matthew Miss mistress morning neighbours never Newfoundland dog parish party Paul Holton person pink plants play Pompey poor Prescott pretty Rose Rosedale round Sandleford seemed Shaw common side sister smile sort spirit standing sweet talk tall thing thought tion town trees village walk whilst whole wife woman wonder young
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 97 - Call for the robin redbreast, and the wren, Since o'er shady groves they hover, And with leaves and flowers do cover The friendless bodies of unburied men. Call unto his funeral dole The ant, the fieldmouse, and the mole, To rear him hillocks that shall keep him warm. And (when gay tombs are robbed) sustain no harm ; But keep the wolf far thence, that's foe to men.
Stran 270 - He has a framed walk of timber covered with vines, which with others, running on most of his walls without prejudice to his lower trees, yield him a deal of wine.
Stran 208 - How beautiful the lane is to-day, decorated with a thousand colours ! The brown road, and the rich verdure that borders it, strewed with the pale yellow leaves of the elm, just beginning to fall; hedgerows glowing with long wreaths of the bramble in every variety of purplish red; and overhead the unchanged green of the fir...
Stran 86 - Creeping like beaded coral; whilst around Flourish the copse's pride, anemones, With rays like golden studs on ivory laid Most delicate ; but touched with purple clouds, Fit crown for April's fair but changeful brow.
Stran 184 - Patty a night's misery, to be compensated by a lifetime of happiness. Jane was almost as glad to lose a lover as her sister was to regain one. Charles is gone home to his father's to make preparations for his bride; Archibald has taken a great nursery garden, and there is some talk in Aberleigh that the marriage of the two sisters is to be celebrated on the same day.
Stran 269 - Dr. Uvedale, of Enfield, is a great lover of plants, and having an extraordinary art in managing them, is become master of the greatest and choicest collection of exotic greens that is perhaps, any where in this land. His greens take up six or seven houses or roomsteads. His...
Stran 178 - Nearly of an age, (I believe that at this moment both are turned of nineteen, and neither has reached twenty.) exactly of a stature, (so high that Frederick would have coveted them for wives for his tall regiment,) with hazel eyes, large mouths, full lips, white teeth, brown hair, clear, healthy complexions, and that sort of nose which is neither Grecian, nor Roman, nor aquiline, nor le petit...
Stran 270 - ... rudely, and sometimes the coneys work under the wall into the garden. 22. Mr. Richardson at East Barnet has a pretty garden, with fine walks and good flowers ; but the garden not being walled about they have less summer fruit, yet are, therefore, the more industrious in managing the peach and apricot dwarf standards, which, they say, supply them plentifully with very good fruit. There is a...
Stran 177 - Whether from skill or from good fortune, or, as is most probable, from a lucky mixture of both, every thing goes right in his great farm. His crops are the best in the parish ; his hay is never spoiled ; his cattle never die ; his servants never thieve ; his children are never ill. He buys cheap, and sells dear ; money gathers about him like a snow-ball ; and yet, in spite of all this provoking and intolerable prosperity, every body loves Farmer Evans.
Stran 251 - Bristol to the head quarters of the British General. It was determined, therefore, to make Warwick Neck, a place opposite to the British encampment, but at a greater distance than Bristol, the point from which they should depart immediately for Rhode-Island. The most inviolable secrecy was enjoined upon his officers by Major Barton, and they returned to Bristol.