The Glory and the Shame of England, المجلد 2Bentley, 1841 |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-5 من 27
الصفحة 13
... heard that there was such a lady as Mrs. Dickens . I think Dickens incomparably the finest- looking man I ever saw . The portrait of him in the Philadelphia edition of his works is good ; but no picture can do justice to his expression ...
... heard that there was such a lady as Mrs. Dickens . I think Dickens incomparably the finest- looking man I ever saw . The portrait of him in the Philadelphia edition of his works is good ; but no picture can do justice to his expression ...
الصفحة 19
... heard equally in the kitchen and the hall ; to enter in at the straight gate of super- cilious rank , or proud and fastidious fashion , and yet to be a welcome passenger in the broad thoroughfare of the vulgar , common- place working ...
... heard equally in the kitchen and the hall ; to enter in at the straight gate of super- cilious rank , or proud and fastidious fashion , and yet to be a welcome passenger in the broad thoroughfare of the vulgar , common- place working ...
الصفحة 20
... heard in the palace . And gets the miserable an en- trance into the great man's house . The poor orphan , that finds what it is to be in a solitary desert in the thick- peopled city ; that , sur- rounded by a million of professing ...
... heard in the palace . And gets the miserable an en- trance into the great man's house . The poor orphan , that finds what it is to be in a solitary desert in the thick- peopled city ; that , sur- rounded by a million of professing ...
الصفحة 26
... heard , in her crimson velvet pew , that , eighteen hundred years ago , some one declared them to be her brethren and sisters . She will fly the very sight of these horrid wretches , and " swear a pretty oath by yea and nay , " because ...
... heard , in her crimson velvet pew , that , eighteen hundred years ago , some one declared them to be her brethren and sisters . She will fly the very sight of these horrid wretches , and " swear a pretty oath by yea and nay , " because ...
الصفحة 60
... heard of her ! " But , " said he , " that is not the slightest evidence that she is not a fine or a distinguished writer , for I have become quite an ignoramus about the literary matters of the 60 GLORY AND SHAME OF ENGLAND . himself, I ...
... heard of her ! " But , " said he , " that is not the slightest evidence that she is not a fine or a distinguished writer , for I have become quite an ignoramus about the literary matters of the 60 GLORY AND SHAME OF ENGLAND . himself, I ...
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
abolitionists Almack's American aristocracy beautiful better bless bread Britain British British empire British India Campbell character Charles Dickens Chartists cheerful Christian civilized conversation corn corn-laws cotton countrymen deep Dickens duty earth East India Company EDWARDS LESTER empire enemies England English English peasant enthusiasm eyes famine favour feel friends genius glorious grain grievance Hall hand hear heard heart Heaven honour human interest Ireland Irish labour land less liberty live London Lord Brougham manufactures meet ment millions mingled missionaries nation native ness never Nicholas Nickleby noble O'Connell Oliver Cromwell oppression Parliament passed persons Pickwick Papers poor present produce racter reform repeal Repeal Association scenes shillings slave slavery speak speech spirit starving suffering suppose tell thing thousands tion week wheat Whigs whole wild witnessed words wretched write