Berkeley Castle: An Historical Romance, 1 tomasRichard Bentley, 1836 - 874 psl. |
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3 psl.
... fathers , Reader , I invite thee to accompany me . Whether thou art one of those galled and gaping critics , whose snarl is ready for every thing and every body ; whether , instead , thou art a friendly soul , whose spirit teems with ...
... fathers , Reader , I invite thee to accompany me . Whether thou art one of those galled and gaping critics , whose snarl is ready for every thing and every body ; whether , instead , thou art a friendly soul , whose spirit teems with ...
10 psl.
... father wear : but let us not tarry here , nor enter into more minute descriptions , lest my mind should wander back into a wilderness of past events , whence it might be difficult to recall it to its more immediate task . Leaving the ...
... father wear : but let us not tarry here , nor enter into more minute descriptions , lest my mind should wander back into a wilderness of past events , whence it might be difficult to recall it to its more immediate task . Leaving the ...
13 psl.
... fathers , handed down to us to the present moment , in one continuous male line , since the time of the Conquest , still I have said enough to give you some idea of the sort of place to which we have journeyed so comfortably , or ...
... fathers , handed down to us to the present moment , in one continuous male line , since the time of the Conquest , still I have said enough to give you some idea of the sort of place to which we have journeyed so comfortably , or ...
14 psl.
... father's death , and my brain was so loaded with recollections pleasing and melancholy , that I had not a thought to bestow on anything unconnected with the asso- ciations around me . In what an unspeakable excite- ment and delight did ...
... father's death , and my brain was so loaded with recollections pleasing and melancholy , that I had not a thought to bestow on anything unconnected with the asso- ciations around me . In what an unspeakable excite- ment and delight did ...
18 psl.
... Vault by James , the Father of the Marquis of Berkeley , with its private door , has been fenced within the boun- daries of the Castle grounds . There among those ivied trees my brothers and myself were 18 BERKELEY CASTLE .
... Vault by James , the Father of the Marquis of Berkeley , with its private door , has been fenced within the boun- daries of the Castle grounds . There among those ivied trees my brothers and myself were 18 BERKELEY CASTLE .
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Berkeley Castle An Historical Romance, 1 tomas Grantley Fitzhardinge Berkeley Visos knygos peržiūra - 1836 |
Berkeley Castle An Historical Romance, 1 tomas Grantley Fitzhardinge Berkeley Peržiūra negalima - 2016 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Annette appearance arms arrived Aust Aust Cliff beneath Berkeley Castle Berkeley family Bishop of Worcester Black blow Bristol brother called castle Castro de Berkeley chase Cirencester command conversation Countess of Shrewsbury court cousin dark daughter dear Herbert death deer door Earl endeavouring enemy eyes father forest Forest of Dean garden gaze Gloucester hand hath head heard heart Henry VI honour horse hour Hugh Mull immediately Ingram Isabel King Lady Shrewsbury late leave light looked Lord Berkeley Lord Darcy Lord Lisle Lord Warwick manors Master Mead Master Rufus Mull Matford Maurice King Maurice's ment mind morning mother never night observation party passed present prisoners proceeded remained reply ride scarcely seemed Severn side Sir Maurice soon spot stood sword tears thee thing Thomas Berkeley thou hast thought tion trees voice walls Wanswell window words Wotton yards
Populiarios ištraukos
227 psl. - Oh Love ! no habitant of earth thou art An unseen seraph, we believe in thee, A faith whose martyrs are the broken heart...
104 psl. - MY soul is dark Oh ! quickly string The harp I yet can brook to hear; And let thy gentle fingers fling Its melting murmurs o'er mine ear. If in this heart a hope be dear, That sound shall charm it forth If in these eyes there lurk a tear, Twill flow, and cease to burn my brain.
30 psl. - Soldier they this prisoner take, '' Of which the French Lord seemeth wondrous faine, " Thereby his safety more secure to make :
28 psl. - ... should have seen above one hundred churches and oratories in the counties of Gloucester and Somerset, and in the cities of Gloucester, Bristol, and Bath (besides as many more in other counties and places, as mine acquaintance have faithfully related to me), having their coats of arms and escutcheons, yea some their pictures, set up in their windows and walls, in and before this Lord's days, and their crosses formées in their true bearings.
78 psl. - FIFTEEN lovely, childish springs, Hair of gold in crisped rings, Cheek and lip with roses spread, Smile, that to the stars can lead, Grace, whose every turn can please, Virtue worthy charms like these. Breast, within whose virgin snows Lies a gentle heart that glows Midst the sparkling thoughts of youth All divine with steady truth ;* Eyes, that make a day of night ; Hands, whose touch so soft and light Hold my soul a prisoner long ; Voice...
79 psl. - ... not a circumstance happened which tinged the waters of the spring with jealousy, and by that means caused them to cast off the spotless lilies that should have slumbered for a longer period on the pure and unsullied surface of the stream.
227 psl. - ... earth thou art An unseen seraph, we believe in thee, A faith whose martyrs are the broken heart, But never yet hath seen, nor e'er shall see The naked eye, thy form, as it should be ; The mind hath made thee, as it peopled heaven, Even with its own desiring phantasy, And to a thought such shape and image given, As haunts the unquench'd soul parch'd wearied wrung and riven. BYRON.
194 psl. - The broad full moon held her lofty path without the smallest cloud being visible ; the vast expanse around her was studded with a million stars, and the soft airy line of the milkyway, looked but as some light and fleecy veil which the queen of night had cast aside as needless now to shield her.
79 psl. - One day she had been singing to me, and I was sitting gazing at her with feelings that then were undefinable ; they were not such as a brother would have harboured in...
147 psl. - ... that period. Abel was present at the siege of Hereford, AD 1645, and invented a sort of hand-mill by which the wheat could be ground into flour for the soldiers. His ingenuity obtained for him the praise of Charles I., and the honourable title of "The King's Carpenter.