Old maids; their varieties, characters, and conditions1835 |
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Página 8
... dream , I have the satisfaction of finding my- self really accompanied by peace and contentment , as a proof of which I need only declare , that I am at this time of life , and in a state generally at- tended with spleen and ill ...
... dream , I have the satisfaction of finding my- self really accompanied by peace and contentment , as a proof of which I need only declare , that I am at this time of life , and in a state generally at- tended with spleen and ill ...
Página 43
... dream , filled with visions of happiness and of un- utterable delight , and which the waking realities of life have long since convinced her , were indeed but visions . She looks abroad upon those who entered the career of existence ...
... dream , filled with visions of happiness and of un- utterable delight , and which the waking realities of life have long since convinced her , were indeed but visions . She looks abroad upon those who entered the career of existence ...
Página 55
... dreams , and formed the subject of their mid - day reveries . The bashful maiden , whose deep fringed eye- lids half conceal the liquid lustre of her hazel eyes , seats herself pensively , away from observa- tion , perchance , in the ...
... dreams , and formed the subject of their mid - day reveries . The bashful maiden , whose deep fringed eye- lids half conceal the liquid lustre of her hazel eyes , seats herself pensively , away from observa- tion , perchance , in the ...
Página 58
... hopes and joys which maidens dream of , when they think of love .'- These thou hast kept in all their original brightness , and now , though the frost of forty winters has pressed upon thee , 58 VOLUNTARY OLD MAIDS .
... hopes and joys which maidens dream of , when they think of love .'- These thou hast kept in all their original brightness , and now , though the frost of forty winters has pressed upon thee , 58 VOLUNTARY OLD MAIDS .
Página 61
... dream and solemn vision , Tell her of things that no gross ear can hear , Till oft converse with Heavenly habitants , Begin to cast a beam on th ' outward shape , The unpolluted temple of the mind , And turns it by degrees to the soul's ...
... dream and solemn vision , Tell her of things that no gross ear can hear , Till oft converse with Heavenly habitants , Begin to cast a beam on th ' outward shape , The unpolluted temple of the mind , And turns it by degrees to the soul's ...
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Términos y frases comunes
accident admired affections amiable amongst attri Aulaire beauty better blush bosom breathe bright brows castitas Celibacy champion chaste chastity cheeks child cold creature dare dear dear Jane dear Mary delight devotion divine dream eyes fair father feelings fixed flowers fond friends gallant gentle Gentle creature Genus glory grace hand happiness heart heaven honor hopes hour Inexplicable Old Maids Involuntary Jane joys Knight-errant labours ladies laugh less Literary Old Maids live looked lover maiden marriage married melancholy mind Miss moral mortification murmured mystery nature never night noble Old Maidism ourselves OVID parterre passed passion rose sacred Sarah Fielding sensibility SHAKSPEARE sigh sing Sir James sister sisterhood sit virginitas smile soft sorrow soul spirit sweet tears tell Temple tenderness thee thing thou hast thought Tibullus tion trembling Vestals virginity voice voluntary Old Maids wandering Jew wife winds of heaven woman young
Pasajes populares
Página 51 - A thousand liveried angels lackey her. Driving far off each thing of sin and guilt; And, in clear dream and solemn vision, Tell her of things, that no gross ear can hear; Till oft converse with heavenly habitants Begin to cast a beam on th
Página 119 - The time would e'er be o'er, And I on thee should look my last, And thou shouldst smile no more! And still upon that face I look, And think 'twill smile again ; And still the thought I will not brook, That I must look in vain ! But when I speak— thou dost not say What thou ne'er left'st unsaid...
Página 148 - And the sweets of the days that are gone. Each dew-drop that steals from the dark eye of night, Is a tear for the bliss that is flown ; While others cull blossoms, J find but a blight, And sigh for the days that are gone.
Página 147 - I still wander alone, And, sunk in dejection, for ever deplore The sweets of the days that are gone. While the sun as it rises, to others shines bright, I think how it formerly shone ; While others cull blossoms, I find but a blight, And sigh for the days that are gone.
Página 208 - Tibullus, ardet in exstructo, corpus inane, rogo. ecce puer Veneris fert eversamque pharetram et fractos arcus et sine luce facem.
Página 153 - Blest source of purer joys! In ev'ry form of beauty bright, That captivates the mental sight With pleasure and surprise; V. To thy unspotted shrine I bow: Attend thy modest suppliant's vow, That breathes no wild desires; But, taught by thy unerring rules, To shun the fruitless wish of fools, To nobler views aspires.
Página 183 - To me thy better gifts impart, Each moral beauty of the heart By studious thought refin'd : For Wealth, the smiles of glad Content, For Pow'r, its amplest, best extent, An empire o'er my mind.
Página 149 - To fill the breast with heav'nly fires! Where for a while the soul must roam. To preconceive the state to come, And when through life the journey's past, Without repining or distaste, Again the spirit will repair, To breathe a more celestial air, And reap, where blessed beings glow, Completion of the joys below. PART III. TERPSICHORE; OR, THE MODERATE. if £* $' ayaflov Tl xaxsv Tl. Horn. od. e. Msec satis est orare Jovem, qui donat et aufert; Dct vitam, del opes; asquum ml aniinuin ips
Página 65 - New moon, new moon, I hail thee ! By all the virtue in thy body, Grant this night that I may see He who my true love is to be.
Página 36 - The labouring hind the mellow olive cheers ; Blossoms and fruit at once the citron shows, And, as she pays, discovers still she owes. The orange to her sun her pride displays, And gilds her fragrant apples with his rays. No blasts e'er discompose the peaceful sky, The springs but murmur and the winds but sigh.