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Common terms and phrasesaffection agitated Almack's amid Author beautiful beneath bitter bosom breath burning calm ceased character cheek choly countenance Dalton dare dark dear death deep delirium Disowned dream earth Emily's emotions entered ERASMUS FALKLAND eternal Family Library farrier feel felt feverish gathered gaze ginal guilt hand happiness heard heart heaven hope House of Commons human indolence John kiss knowledge LADY EMILY MANDEVILLE Lady Margaret less letter light lips live lodar London looked marriage melan mind mingled Monkton NAPOLEON BUONAPARTE nature ness never night Novel once pale passed passion PAUL CLIFFORD pause pleasure ranny rapture recollections reflection remember remorse repose Riego satiety scarcely scenes seemed silent smiled soft solitude soul Spaniard spirit spot stood surrounded tbit tears tenderness thing thought tion to-morrow tone tremble turned vanity voice vols Walter Scott weary word wretched write youth Popular passagesPage 81 - Knowledge before — a discovery that there are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamed of in our philosophy. Page 24 - Ah me! for aught that ever I could read. Could ever hear by tale or history, The course of true love never did run smooth: But, either it was different in blood; Her. Page 57 - ... engrosses all the sources of thought, and excludes every object but itself; but in the latter, it is shared with all the former reflections and feelings which the past yet bequeaths us, and can neither (however powerful be its nature) constitute the whole of our happiness or woe. The love of man in his maturer years is not indeed so much a new emotion, as a revival and concentration of all his departed affections to others; and the deep and intense nature of Falkland's passion for Emily was... Page 31 - Our senses may captivate us with beauty ; but in absence we forget, or by reason we can conquer so superficial an impression. Our vanity may enamour us with rank ; but the affections of vanity are traced in sand : but who can love Genius, and not feel that the sentiments it excites partake of its own intenseness and its own immortality ? It arouses, concentrates, engrosses all our emotions, even to the most subtle and concealed. Page 121 - PELHAM; OR, THE ADVENTURES OF A GENTLEMAN. A Novel. In 2 vols. 12mo. THE DISOWNED. A Novel. In 2 vols. 12mo. By the Author of "Pelham,"&c. [Stereotyped.) DEVEREUX. A Novel. In 2 vols. I2mo. By the Author of " Pelham, Bibliographic information |