The Priest ...Baldwin, 1821 |
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Page 31
... Animated by the delight of engros- sing the whole attention of an auditor , who , he concluded , was listening to his narrative with equal amazement and interest , he resumed his loquacity : - " The King's warrant procured us in- stant ...
... Animated by the delight of engros- sing the whole attention of an auditor , who , he concluded , was listening to his narrative with equal amazement and interest , he resumed his loquacity : - " The King's warrant procured us in- stant ...
Page 36
... animation had been that of prayer for deprecation , whether he denounced ruin on the church under the impulse of hope or fear , the most acute could not have penetrated . Shirley , whose mind laboured with the events memory recalled ...
... animation had been that of prayer for deprecation , whether he denounced ruin on the church under the impulse of hope or fear , the most acute could not have penetrated . Shirley , whose mind laboured with the events memory recalled ...
Page 86
... animated that affecting countenance on which Lewen gazed so intensely , that every other power of mental or physical organization ap- peared absorbed in that of sight . Un- nance . able to trace the impressive effect to its complication ...
... animated that affecting countenance on which Lewen gazed so intensely , that every other power of mental or physical organization ap- peared absorbed in that of sight . Un- nance . able to trace the impressive effect to its complication ...
Page 99
... animated by an ardour similar to that which was a great engine in promoting the success of the apostolic divines in the first age of Christianity . There was always some old point to combat , which naturally elicited that energy ...
... animated by an ardour similar to that which was a great engine in promoting the success of the apostolic divines in the first age of Christianity . There was always some old point to combat , which naturally elicited that energy ...
Page 159
... animated the domestics . The Countess's ladies were to be seen fre- quently pacing the galleries , with faces gayer than common , and steps more alert . There was an elastic cheerfulness in all around , very different from the sombre ...
... animated the domestics . The Countess's ladies were to be seen fre- quently pacing the galleries , with faces gayer than common , and steps more alert . There was an elastic cheerfulness in all around , very different from the sombre ...
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Common terms and phrases
agony animated anxious appeared Archibald Shirley beauty Benjamin Shirley bosom bowed bright Broadgate Park brow calmness castle Catholic cheek child church colour Confessor countenance Countess of Arding daughter deep deepening demanded Lewen desired dignity Duke of Suffolk Earl of Arding effect emotion face Father Valerius favour feeling felt gazed glance glowed grave hand heart Heaven honour inclined kindly Lady Blanche Evelyn Lady Jane Grey Lady Joanna Lady of Arding Lady's Leicestershire Lewen paused lips Lord's Mark Russell Marleyland Master Lewen Master Secretary ment mind mingled Monk mother ness never observed pale passions penetrating perdition perfect Philip Altham pious present racterized rendered replied Lewen replied Shirley Roger Ascham Russell seemed Seneschal silence sion smile softened soul Steward stood Stranger subdued suffer thee thou art thou hast thou shouldst thou wilt tion tone tranquil trembling Verily voice whilst whole William Lewen young youth
Popular passages
Page 67 - Geffrey's wife: Young Arthur is my son, and he is lost: I am not mad, I would to heaven I were. For then, 'tis like, I should forget myself. 0 if I could, what grief should I forget! I am not mad; too well, too well I feel The different plague of each calamity.
Page 121 - ... as a missionary ; — Miss Knight, sick and solemn ; —several Irish girls apparently on their promotion ; — Mr. Harvey, who plays chess, and takes care of his flowers : he has them in an hermetically sealed glass case, which he is taking to the Cape ; — a number of hitherto unnamed gentlemen, who sit down to eat and drink, and rise up to play ; — one or two pretty boys, who saunter about with Lord Byron in hand ; — and Mr.
Page 186 - And greatly altered in his disposition. When he came first to lodge here in my house, Ne'er trust me, if I were not proud of him : Methought he bare himself in such a fashion, So full of man, and sweetness in his carriage, And — what was chief — it showed not borrowed in him, But all he did, became him as his own, And seemed as perfect, proper, and possessed, As breath with life, or colour with the blood.
Page 67 - And, father Cardinal, I have heard you say That we shall see and know our friends in heaven; If that be true, I shall see my boy again...
Page 256 - For the Methodists in every place grow diligent and frugal; consequently they increase in goods. Hence they proportionately increase in pride, in anger, in the desire of the flesh, the desire of the eyes, and the pride of life.
Page 251 - Spirit-filled life stir the church of which he was a member and to which he was loyal, to holy endeavor in the Lord.
Page 97 - Our hearts are deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked ; who can know them...