The Miscellaneous Works of Henry MackenzieHarper & brothers, 1858 - 512 pages |
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Page 13
... thing perma- nently noble and excellent in character , which was a stranger to the exercise of resolute self - denial . The account of the victims of Sindall's arts and crimes , particularly the early history of the Annesleys , is ...
... thing perma- nently noble and excellent in character , which was a stranger to the exercise of resolute self - denial . The account of the victims of Sindall's arts and crimes , particularly the early history of the Annesleys , is ...
Page 16
... thing perma- nently noble and excellent in character , which was a stranger to the exercise of resolute self - denial . The account of the victims of Sindall's arts and crimes , particularly the early history of the Annesleys , is ...
... thing perma- nently noble and excellent in character , which was a stranger to the exercise of resolute self - denial . The account of the victims of Sindall's arts and crimes , particularly the early history of the Annesleys , is ...
Page 38
... must not look for any thing of the Socratic pleasantry about him ; on the contrary , I warn you to expect the spirit of a Diogenes . That you may be a little prepared for his extraordinary manner , I will 38 THE MAN OF FEELING .
... must not look for any thing of the Socratic pleasantry about him ; on the contrary , I warn you to expect the spirit of a Diogenes . That you may be a little prepared for his extraordinary manner , I will 38 THE MAN OF FEELING .
Page 39
... thing of human form ; sold his lands , which still produced him a very large reversion ; came to town , and immured him- self with a woman , who had been his nurse , in little better than a garret ; and has ever since applied his ...
... thing of human form ; sold his lands , which still produced him a very large reversion ; came to town , and immured him- self with a woman , who had been his nurse , in little better than a garret ; and has ever since applied his ...
Page 40
... thing I must take the liberty to instruct you ; however different your sentiments may be , ( and different they must be , ) you will suffer him to go on without contradiction , otherwise he will be silent immediately , and we shall not ...
... thing I must take the liberty to instruct you ; however different your sentiments may be , ( and different they must be , ) you will suffer him to go on without contradiction , otherwise he will be silent immediately , and we shall not ...
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Common terms and phrases
acquaintance affection amidst Annesly's answered baronet bearbaiting beauty began begged believe Belville bless Bolton Boothby bosom called Camplin CHAPTER Colonel companion daugh daughter distress door endeavor eyes father favor fear feel fortune friendship gentleman give hand happy Harley Harriet Harry Benson heard heart Heaven HENRY MACKENZIE honor hope husband imagined Jack Ryland Julia de Roubigné leave letter look Lucy manner Maria marriage Martinique master mind misfortune Miss Annesly Miss Sindall Miss Walton Montauban morning mother Muslin nature nesly ness never night obliged observed perhaps pleasure possessed Rawlinson recollection remember returned Sancerre Savillon scene seemed Segarva sentiments servant Silton Sir Thomas Sindall situation smile sometimes soon sorrow sort soul speak stood suffered talk tears tell tender thing thought tion told virtue walk wife Wilbrook wish Wistanly young lady
Popular passages
Page 103 - I care not, fortune, what you me deny ; You cannot rob me of free nature's grace ; You cannot shut the windows of the sky, Through which Aurora shows her brightening face, You cannot bar my constant feet to trace The woods and lawns, by living stream, at eve : Let health my nerves and finer fibres brace, And I their toys to the great children leave : Of fancy, reason, virtue, nought can me bereave.
Page 509 - Life and Times of Titian, with some Account of hig Family, chiefly from new and unpublished records. With Portrait and Illustrations. 2 vols. Svo. 42s. GUMMING (R. GORDON). Five Years of a Hunter's Life in the Far Interior of South Africa.
Page 474 - MORE than forty years ago, an English philosopher, whose works have since been read and admired by all Europe, resided at a little town in France. Some disappointments in his native country had first driven him abroad, and he was afterwards induced to remain there, from having found, in this retreat, where the connections even of nation and language were avoided, a perfect seclusion and retirement highly favourable to the developement of abstract subjects, in which he excelled all the writers of...
Page 483 - You behold the mourner of his only child, the last earthly stay and blessing of his declining years ! Such a child, too ! It becomes not me to speak of her virtues ; yet it is but gratitude to mention them, because they were exerted towards myself. Not many days ago you saw her young, beautiful, virtuous, and happy : ye who are parents will judge of my felicity then — ye will judge of my affliction now.
Page 165 - Unfit for the bustle of affairs, and the amusements of his youth, an old man, if he has no source of mental exertion or employment, often settles into the gloom of melancholy and peevishness, or petrifies his feelings by habitual intoxication. From an . old man whose gratifications were solely derived from those sensual appetites which time has blunted, or from those trivial amusements of which youth only can share, age has cut off almost every source of enjoyment.
Page 478 - Tis an additional inducement," replied the other ; and they walked into the room together. At the end stood the organ mentioned by La Roche ; before it was a curtain which his daughter drew aside, and placing herself on a seat within, and drawing the curtain close so as to save her the awkwardness of an exhibition, began a voluntary, solemn and beautiful in the highest degree.
Page 78 - The little dogs and all, Tray, Blanche, and Sweetheart, see, they bark at me...
Page 483 - s heart was smitten ; and I have heard him, long after, confess that there were moments when the remembrance overcame him even to weakness; when, amidst all the pleasures of philosophical discovery, and the pride of literary fame, he recalled to his mind the venerable figure of the good La Roche, and wished that he had never doubted.
Page 118 - ... insensible to the pleasures of home, to the little joys and endearments of a family, to the affection of relations, to the fidelity of domestics. Next to being well with his own conscience, the friendship and attachment of a man's family and dependants seems to me one of the most comfortable circumstances in his lot.
Page 163 - ... be on the side of literature. In young minds of any vivacity, there is a natural aversion to the drudgery of business, which is seldom overcome, till the effervescence of youth is allayed by the progress of time and habit, or till that i'ery warmth is enlisted on the side of their profession, by the opening prospects of ambition or emolument.