| Charles Knight - 1820 - 636 pages
...unconscionable yearnings ; If you are lame, and deaf, and blind, You've had your three sufficient warning) ; So come along ! no more we'll part." He said, and touched him with his dart : And.now old Dodson, turning pale, .--.. . ... • Yields to his fate ! — So ends my talc. VOL.... | |
| John Bowdler - Hymns, English - 1821 - 510 pages
...If you are lame, and deaf, and blind, " You've had your three sufficient warnings; " So come along 1 no more we'll part," He said ; and touched him with his dart : And now old Dobson, turning pale, Yields to his fate N — ^So ends »y talc. EXTRACTS FROM SOME... | |
| John Pierpont - Children's literature - 1828 - 320 pages
...unreasonable yearnings : If you are tame, and deaf, and blind, You've had your three sufficient warnings: So come along; no more we'll part." He said, and touched him with his dart: And now old Dobson, turning pale, Yields to his fate so ends my tale. LESSON CXLII. The Mariner't Dream.—DIMONH.... | |
| John Barber - Elocution - 1828 - 310 pages
...unjustifiable yearnings; If you are deaf, and lame, and blind, You have had your three sufficient warnings, So come along; no more we'll part, He said, and touched him with his dart. And now oldDobson turning pale Yields to his fate—so ends my tale. ON THE AMERICAN WAR. CHATHAM.... | |
| John Pierpont - Readers - 1829 - 290 pages
...unreasonable yearnings : If you are lame, and deaf, and blind, You've had your three sufficient warnings : So come along; no more we'll part." He said, and touched him with his dart : And now old Dobson, turning pale, Yields to his fate so ends my tale. LESSON CXLII. The Mariner's... | |
| Anne Parker - 1835 - 302 pages
...unjustifiable yearnings: If you are Lame, and Deaf, and Blind, You've had your Three sufficient Warnings. So come along, no more we'll part !" He said, and touched him with his dart; And now old Dobson, turning pale, Yields to his fate; — so ends my tale. PIOZZI. THE PRIMROSE AND... | |
| Pierce Egan - London (England) - 1838 - 418 pages
...old paintings.) until the return of Easter Monday should again call him forth to meet his nnmerous' patrons at Greenwich, when the " Grim King of Terrors,"...his mind was quite comfortable —he was prepared to die—that he had disposed of his property entirely to his satisfaction, and he was quite resigned."... | |
| Henry Marlen - 1838 - 342 pages
...yearnings ; " If you are Lame, and Deaf, and Blind, " You've had your Three sufficient Warnings, •" So come along, no more we'll part ;" He said, and touched him with his dart. And now Old Dobson, turning pale, Yields to his fate — so ends my tale. A CONTEST BETWEEN THE NOSE... | |
| Jesse Olney - Readers - 1838 - 346 pages
...unreasonable yearnings : If you are lame, and deaf, and blind, You've had your three sufficient warnings : So come along ; no more we'll part." He said, and touched him with his dart : And now old Dobson, turning pale, Yields to his fate so ends my tale. LESSON CVH. The Dervis and... | |
| George Willson - Elocution - 1840 - 298 pages
...unreasonable yearnings : If you are lame, and deaf, and blind, You've had your three suflicient warnings : So come along ; no more we'll part." He said, and touched him with his dart : And now old Dobson, turning pale, Yields to his fate so ends my tale 16 LESSON LXXVI The Misfortunes... | |
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