Jane Lomax; Or, A Mother's Crime, Volume 1H. Colburn, 1838 |
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Page 11
... ! you are all very goot do me , and very addendive . Your daughter Mary is a sharming girl , and so quiet , so gendle , so thoughtful , so soft spoken fain she read do me de Brice Gurrent , de sales by auction , or JANE LOMAX . 11.
... ! you are all very goot do me , and very addendive . Your daughter Mary is a sharming girl , and so quiet , so gendle , so thoughtful , so soft spoken fain she read do me de Brice Gurrent , de sales by auction , or JANE LOMAX . 11.
Page 42
... Mary has youth , health , beauty , and accomplishments , with which she can hardly fail to make her way in life ; but my poor , dear boy is sickly , sensitive , and con- scientious , with a mind as delicate as his frame , and both ...
... Mary has youth , health , beauty , and accomplishments , with which she can hardly fail to make her way in life ; but my poor , dear boy is sickly , sensitive , and con- scientious , with a mind as delicate as his frame , and both ...
Page 48
... look of displeasure and surprise ; " what can it be ? Has any thing happened to Hoffman ? ” " Where are the children ? " asked Mrs. Lomax , not heeding his interrogatories . " Mary is in the parlour , working , and 48 JANE LOMAX .
... look of displeasure and surprise ; " what can it be ? Has any thing happened to Hoffman ? ” " Where are the children ? " asked Mrs. Lomax , not heeding his interrogatories . " Mary is in the parlour , working , and 48 JANE LOMAX .
Page 52
... Mary's ? Would it not rejoice your soul to be suddenly lifted up from this slough of despond , and elevated for the remainder of your days into a station of ease , comfort , independence , wealth , such as should empower you , to raise ...
... Mary's ? Would it not rejoice your soul to be suddenly lifted up from this slough of despond , and elevated for the remainder of your days into a station of ease , comfort , independence , wealth , such as should empower you , to raise ...
Page 67
... Mary is only two or three years older than myself , and yet she is always at her needle , or assisting in the house- hold offices . Dear father , do not you think I am now strong enough to take a situation in some counting - house ...
... Mary is only two or three years older than myself , and yet she is always at her needle , or assisting in the house- hold offices . Dear father , do not you think I am now strong enough to take a situation in some counting - house ...
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Common terms and phrases
affectionate affections agitated apothecary Barlow beautiful bedder Benjamin better bless bosom Bryant character circumstances companion countenance cried crime Cypress House darling Benjamin dear Alfred dear boy dear Jane dear Mary dear Rose death delight detection duty Eagle Wharf Edward Ruddock ejaculated exclaimed eyes fate father favour fear feelings felt fortune girl give goot Grimsby hand happiness Harriet heart Heaven Hoffman hope Hunter hurried husband Ilfracombe instantly Jane Joel lady LEICESTER SQUARE less look marriage Mary Lomax Meaux ment mind Miss Owen mother nature ness never night object occasion Old Bailey painful parents party passion perhaps Pike poor present preter racter rendered reply resumed Rose Mayhew scarcely secret seemed sick smile soul spirit suffer sure tears terror thing thought tion tremble trifling uttered Vandermeulen voice whispered whole wife wish words wretched your's
Popular passages
Page 193 - But, soft! what light through yonder window breaks! It is the east, and Juliet is the sun ! — Arise, fair sun, and kill the envious moon, Who is already sick and pale with grief, That thou her maid art far more fair than she...
Page 193 - O, speak again, bright angel! for thou art As glorious to this night, being o'er my head, As is a winged messenger of heaven Unto the white-upturned wondering eyes Of mortals that fall back to gaze on him, When he bestrides the lazy-pacing clouds And sails upon the bosom of the air.
Page 279 - Friendship is constant in all other things Save in the office and affairs of love: Therefore all hearts in love use their own tongues; Let every eye negotiate for itself, And trust no agent; for beauty is a witch, Against whose charms faith melteth into blood.
Page 23 - How happy could I be with either, Were t'other dear Charmer away!
Page 139 - Hence, thou impostor, traitor, monster, devil ! — I can no more: Thou, and my griefs, have sunk Me down so low, that I want voice to curse thee. Alex. Suppose some shipwrecked seaman near the shore, Dropping and faint with climbing up the cliff...
Page 111 - Glories Of Human greatness are but pleasing dreams And shadows soon decaying : on the stage Of my mortality my youth hath acted Some scenes of vanity, drawn out at length By varied pleasures, sweetened in the mixture, But tragical in issue : beauty, pomp, With every sensuality our giddiness Doth frame an idol, are unconstant friends, When any troubled passion makes assault On the unguarded castle of the mind.
Page 96 - This hour's the very crisis of your fate, Your good or ill, your infamy or fame, And all the colour of your life, depends On this important now.