Stories about:- (by lady M.A. Barker). |
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lady Mary Anne Broome. Of these Stories some are reprinted from the pages of " Good Words for the Young . " 30 ABOUT MONKEYS . I NEVER can tell a story.
lady Mary Anne Broome. Of these Stories some are reprinted from the pages of " Good Words for the Young . " 30 ABOUT MONKEYS . I NEVER can tell a story.
Página
lady Mary Anne Broome. Of these Stories some are reprinted from the pages of " Good Words for the Young . " 30 ABOUT MONKEYS . I NEVER can tell a story.
lady Mary Anne Broome. Of these Stories some are reprinted from the pages of " Good Words for the Young . " 30 ABOUT MONKEYS . I NEVER can tell a story.
Página 7
... young ones to be taken from their mothers , so there were none in the market . I returned , after a week's absence on shore , very disconsolately to the ship without having succeeded in procuring a monkey ; but the first person I met on ...
... young ones to be taken from their mothers , so there were none in the market . I returned , after a week's absence on shore , very disconsolately to the ship without having succeeded in procuring a monkey ; but the first person I met on ...
Página 30
... young aunt of whom we children were excessively fond , an English nurse , my sister , and myself . Jessie was about four years old , the prettiest little fairy imaginable , and the idol and pet of every one . I am sorry to say I was ...
... young aunt of whom we children were excessively fond , an English nurse , my sister , and myself . Jessie was about four years old , the prettiest little fairy imaginable , and the idol and pet of every one . I am sorry to say I was ...
Página 43
... position of affairs . 6 The most vivid of all my recollections of that sad afternoon is hearing a soldier say that he saw the exploring party returning , and he added , " The young lady is alive too , I am certain . ' II ] 43 JAMAICA .
... position of affairs . 6 The most vivid of all my recollections of that sad afternoon is hearing a soldier say that he saw the exploring party returning , and he added , " The young lady is alive too , I am certain . ' II ] 43 JAMAICA .
Términos y frases comunes
afterwards amuse ayah baby beautiful bheestie birds bright buckra cage called camels camp Cecil cheetah chupattie clever creature dear delighted door dreadful dressed Edinburgh Castle elephant eyes face fastened father feet felt Ferrars flax gallop gave grass hair hand head heard horses hour Hutchinson J. E. ROGERS Jack Jack's back Jamaica Jessie Jessie's Joey jumped kelasses kitten knew lady looked lovely Lucknow mahout Mamma master monkey morning mother naughty Nawab negro never night nurse once paddock palkee Papa parrots Pompey pony poor little pretty quiet Rakaia remember ride round saddle seemed servants shelter side sight Skye terrier snake soon sort stood story syce tail tell tent thing thought Tip's Toddy told took tree turkeys turned verandah walk watch whilst young Zealand
Pasajes populares
Página 200 - BETWEEN the dark and the daylight, When the night is beginning to lower, Comes a pause in the day's occupations, That is known as the Children's Hour. I hear in the chamber above me The patter of little feet, The sound of a door that is opened, And voices soft and sweet. From my study I see in the lamplight, Descending the broad hall stair, Grave Alice, and laughing Allegra, And Edith with golden hair. A whisper, and then a silence : Yet I know by...
Página 65 - There is a very small snake, only two feet long, called the ' whip snake,' from its resemblance to the lash of a...
Página 157 - I will lift up mine eyes to the hills, From whence cometh my help; My help cometh from the Lord, Who made heaven and earth.
Página 27 - But hark ! there is Nurse calling Effie ! It is bedtime, so run away ; And I must go back, or the others Will be wondering why I stay. XVIII. " So good night to my darling Effie ; Keep happy, sweetheart, and grow wise : — There's one kiss for her golden tresses, And two for her sleepy eyes.
Página 152 - ... enormous bounds carried him close to the buck, who stood for an instant as if paralysed, and then turned to fly; but it was too late ; a third spring with a howl of fury brought the cheetah on his back, with his teeth in the graceful neck which a moment before had held the antlered head up so proudly. I saw the buck drop on his knees, and the keeper rush up to secure the cheetah again before he should begin to tear the venison, and then I could see no more ; the gentlemen galloped off to the...
Página 100 - ... gorge and escape us for that night. Jack felt bound in honour to prevent this ; so he laid himself well out to his work, and with the most wonderful instinct availed himself of every inch of ground by which he could gain the entrance to the gorge before the mob. He not only succeeded in heading them, but actually turned them into the stock-yard close by ; and •when I recovered my presence of mind, I found myself still on Jack's back, who was standing across the open place where the slip-rail...
Página 139 - I looked at the horses,—they were all as white as if they had been powdered with flour; so were their syces; and the ' bheesties,' or watercarriers, were very busy filling the large goat-skins which serve them as water-jugs, to give every live thing which had been outside a good drink, and to wash the dust out of their eyes and ears. The camels had buried their noses in the sand, and did not appear to have suffered at all. I went that afternoon to the elephants...