The GleanerJoseph S. Hart, 1834 |
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... wife of an amiable and respectable gentleman , a merchant of New York . The recollections of her former suitor , however , were not entirely obliterated ; she thought of him with mingled emotions of pity and horror . We were induced to ...
... wife of an amiable and respectable gentleman , a merchant of New York . The recollections of her former suitor , however , were not entirely obliterated ; she thought of him with mingled emotions of pity and horror . We were induced to ...
Page 5
... wife of an amiable and respectable gentleman , a merchant of New York . The recollections of her former suitor , however , were not entirely obliterated ; she thought of him with min- gled emotions of pity and horror . new worlds-- at ...
... wife of an amiable and respectable gentleman , a merchant of New York . The recollections of her former suitor , however , were not entirely obliterated ; she thought of him with min- gled emotions of pity and horror . new worlds-- at ...
Page 9
... wife was a Miss Young , of Covent Garden Theatre . On the morning after the maraiage , she received the fol- iowing epistle from Mrs. Martyr , of the same Theatre . DOCTORING . - When the Docters P. and S.eminent physicians were on a ...
... wife was a Miss Young , of Covent Garden Theatre . On the morning after the maraiage , she received the fol- iowing epistle from Mrs. Martyr , of the same Theatre . DOCTORING . - When the Docters P. and S.eminent physicians were on a ...
Page 11
... Wife . Woman's love , like the rose blossom- ing in the arid desert , spreads its rays over the barren plain of the human heart , and while all around it is barren and des- unwelcome breezes of morn . - The cho- ral songsters had ...
... Wife . Woman's love , like the rose blossom- ing in the arid desert , spreads its rays over the barren plain of the human heart , and while all around it is barren and des- unwelcome breezes of morn . - The cho- ral songsters had ...
Page 13
... wife , for he will tell her , and she will tell her sister , and her sister will tell aunt Hanah , and aunt Hannah will impart it as a profound secret to every one of her female acquaintance . ” CONJUGAL LOVE . - A person praising A ...
... wife , for he will tell her , and she will tell her sister , and her sister will tell aunt Hanah , and aunt Hannah will impart it as a profound secret to every one of her female acquaintance . ” CONJUGAL LOVE . - A person praising A ...
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Popular passages
Page 37 - ... all the pleasures of the world, and consequently know their futility, and do not regret their loss. I appraise them at their real value, which is in truth very low; whereas those who have not experienced always over-rate them.
Page 37 - I reflect back upon what I have seen, what I have heard, and what I have done, I can hardly persuade myself that all that frivolous hurry and bustle...
Page 35 - He swore to be constant, she vow'd to be true. It had not been prudent to deal with delay. The bloom of a rose passes quickly away, And the pride of a butterfly dies in a day.
Page 29 - Modesty is not only an ornament, but also a guard to virtue. It is a kind of quick and delicate feeling in the soul, which makes her shrink and withdraw herself from every thing that has danger in it.
Page 37 - I have seen,' says this man of the world, " the silly rounds of business and pleasure, and have done with them all. I have enjoyed all the pleasures of the world, and consequently know their futility, and do not regret their loss.