Mabel; a Novel, Volume 11854 |
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Page 52
... Lucy with you ; she is not quite well , and a run in the country will do her good , after the heat of Bath . My little girl finds pleasure in any- thing , and I promise you she shall be very good if you will let her come to you . " " Oh ...
... Lucy with you ; she is not quite well , and a run in the country will do her good , after the heat of Bath . My little girl finds pleasure in any- thing , and I promise you she shall be very good if you will let her come to you . " " Oh ...
Page 53
... Lucy , all little girls are not so good as my Amy . " " It would be unkind to refuse her , " said Mabel . " And if she is not well , poor child , " added her mother . " I quite forget how old Lucy is , she cannot be so very little after ...
... Lucy , all little girls are not so good as my Amy . " " It would be unkind to refuse her , " said Mabel . " And if she is not well , poor child , " added her mother . " I quite forget how old Lucy is , she cannot be so very little after ...
Page 54
... Lucy's room when Caroline is gone . I am afraid we cannot man- age it . " " We will see how old she is when she comes , " suggested Mabel , and if she is afraid to sleep by herself Betsy must sleep with her ; but from what I remember ...
... Lucy's room when Caroline is gone . I am afraid we cannot man- age it . " " We will see how old she is when she comes , " suggested Mabel , and if she is afraid to sleep by herself Betsy must sleep with her ; but from what I remember ...
Page 57
... Lucy is very little ? " " I do not much think she is little at all , " replied Mabel . " But aunt Villars called her , my little girl , " persisted Amy . " Yes , but many mammas talk of grown up children in the same way . " " Do you ...
... Lucy is very little ? " " I do not much think she is little at all , " replied Mabel . " But aunt Villars called her , my little girl , " persisted Amy . " Yes , but many mammas talk of grown up children in the same way . " " Do you ...
Page 61
... Lucy , for if you spoke the truth , she could not think you liked any of her naughty ways . " " Then why may I not know her now- could I not speak the truth ? " " Perhaps you might , " said Mabel ; " but I think , sometimes , that not ...
... Lucy , for if you spoke the truth , she could not think you liked any of her naughty ways . " " Then why may I not know her now- could I not speak the truth ? " " Perhaps you might , " said Mabel ; " but I think , sometimes , that not ...
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Common terms and phrases
amused Amy's Aston Aston Manor aunt bailiff Bath beautiful Betsy better blackberries Captain Clair Caroline Cheltenham child Colonel Hargrave comfort Cotswold hills cottage countenance cried dare say door dress enquired exclaimed eyes face fear feel felt fire forget forgive fuge garden gently Giles girl give Gloucestershire hand happy hear heard heart hope hurried indolence kind laugh leave Lesly Lesly's listen looked Lucy Villars Lucy's Mabel dear mamma Manor Manor House marriage Martin Miss Ware morning mother muslin never night night lamp old maid pain perhaps poor promise rectory remember replied Mabel round scarcely seated seemed shew silence sister sleep smile soon sorrow sorry speak stranger suffered sweet talk tears tell thing thought told turned unkind voice waiting walk watch WELBECK STREET wish woman wrong young
Popular passages
Page 205 - The rose looks fair, but fairer we it deem For that sweet odour which doth in it live. The canker-blooms have full as deep a dye As the perfumed tincture of the roses, Hang on such thorns, and play as wantonly When summer's breath their masked buds discloses: But, for their virtue only is their show, They live unwoo'd and unrespected fade; Die to themselves.
Page 1 - New mercies, each returning day, Hover around us while we pray ; New perils past, new sins forgiven, New thoughts of God, new hopes of heaven.
Page 325 - I wonder not that parents' eyes, In gazing thus, grow cold and dim, That burning tears and aching sighs Are blended with the funeral hymn ; The spirit hath an earthly part, That weeps when earthly pleasure flies, And heaven would scorn the frozen heart That melts not when the infant dies.
Page 296 - ... hopes and views sublime. To her he came to die, and every day She took some portion of the dread away; With him she pray'd, to him his Bible read, Soothed the faint heart, and held the aching head.
Page 19 - They that forsake the law praise the wicked: but such as keep the law contend with them.
Page 219 - The mind's brave ardor in heroic aims, Such as may raise us o'er the grovelling herd, And make us shine for ever — that is life.
Page 135 - Remembered there were paths less fair, And, selfish in my own blest lot, Ne'er strove to soothe another's care. But when the weight of sorrow found My spirit prostrate and resigned, The anguish of the bleeding wound Taught me to feel for all mankind. Even as from the wounded tree The goodly, precious balm will pour ; So in the rived heart there'll be Mercy that never flowed before.
Page 109 - Brothers in blood and nurture too, Aliens in heart so oft should prove ; One lose, the other keep, Heaven's clue ; One dwell in wrath, and one in love.
Page 151 - Is this a Mother's Love ? A parent's heart may prove a snare; The child she loves so well, Her hand may lead, with gentlest care, Down the smooth road to hell ; Nourish its frame, — destroy its mind : Thus do the blind mislead the blind, Even with a Mother's Love.
Page 64 - This let me hope, that when in public view I bring my pictures, men may feel them true ; 'This is a likeness,' may they all declare, 'And I have seen him, but I know not where;' For I should mourn the mischief I had done, If as the likeness all would fix on one.