Holiday PapersR. Hardwicke, 1864 - 431 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 65
Page 7
... whole thing . Protest , and secure the gratitude of others who have small moral courage , as well as your own digestion and sleep ; protest , and win eventually respect and health . Indeed , to enjoy a holiday thoroughly , there is need ...
... whole thing . Protest , and secure the gratitude of others who have small moral courage , as well as your own digestion and sleep ; protest , and win eventually respect and health . Indeed , to enjoy a holiday thoroughly , there is need ...
Page 9
Harry Jones. Avoid Return Tickets . 9 be lost before you get its whole value . You will peep at it in your pocket - book in unsuitable places . It will bring back the vision of the London terminus when you pay some boatman on the lakes ...
Harry Jones. Avoid Return Tickets . 9 be lost before you get its whole value . You will peep at it in your pocket - book in unsuitable places . It will bring back the vision of the London terminus when you pay some boatman on the lakes ...
Page 26
... whole holiday - when we sweep the floor , and are content to leave the skull silent and empty . The tenants will come back rosy and fresh from their play in the fields . Doubtlessly , this clearance of the intellect is by no means an ...
... whole holiday - when we sweep the floor , and are content to leave the skull silent and empty . The tenants will come back rosy and fresh from their play in the fields . Doubtlessly , this clearance of the intellect is by no means an ...
Page 40
... whole fabric being rendered so shaky that it clearly could never float again . I don't think the boat ought to have been thus rudely wrecked , though I some- how felt it was doomed . Of course , had I been humoured , I should have been ...
... whole fabric being rendered so shaky that it clearly could never float again . I don't think the boat ought to have been thus rudely wrecked , though I some- how felt it was doomed . Of course , had I been humoured , I should have been ...
Page 48
... used to twitch them out before they had time to gorge themselves . Provided with a pailful of water , into which we put them , we worked on the whole summer , carrying the vessel back , one Snaring Pike . 49 on each side , with several.
... used to twitch them out before they had time to gorge themselves . Provided with a pailful of water , into which we put them , we worked on the whole summer , carrying the vessel back , one Snaring Pike . 49 on each side , with several.
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Common terms and phrases
appetite Avranches beach bees beneath birds breakfast Breton carp catch caterpillars charm cloth coloured comes course croquet crowd dabchick dinner dreams eggs English Fcap feel fellow fieldfare fire fish fresh frogs garden give half hand head highlows hive hole holiday hour insects jackdaws labour lark larvæ leave living London look machine meal Michel migration mind morocco mouth Nature nest never nurse nuthatch once P. L. SIMMONDS passed perhaps pike play quoit redwing RESEDACEA rooks round short cut shot sick sight sleep sometimes starling stick street summer suppose swallow tail tench thing thought thrush tomtit touch town tree turn vulgar walk watch Waterworts whew whole window winter wonder yards young
Popular passages
Page 257 - PEACE be to this house, and to all that dwell in it. IT When he cometh into the sick man's presence, he shall say, kneeling down, REMEMBER not, LORD, our iniquities, nor the iniquities of our forefathers ; Spare us, good LORD, spare thy people, whom thou hast redeemed with thy most precious blood ; and be not angry with us for ever.
Page 244 - I want is, that you should be able so far to put yourself out of the question, as to rejoice with those that rejoice, and weep with those that weep.
Page 166 - My curtains drawn and all is snug ; Old Puss is in her elbow-chair, And Tray is sitting on the rug. Last night I had a curious dream ; Miss Susan Bates was Mistress Mogg — What d'ye think of that, my Cat ? What d'ye think of that, my Dog ? She...
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Page 247 - Consult your patient's wants, but consult him as little as possible. Your decision need not be very obvious and positive ; you will be most decisive if no one suspects that you are so at all. It is the triumph of supremacy to become unconsciously supreme. Nowhere is this decision more blessed than in a sick-room. Where it exists in its genuineness, the sufferer is never contradicted, never coerced ; all little victories are assumed. The decisive nurse is never peremptory, never loud. She is distinct,...
Page 119 - During the last century it has spread gradually over Asiatic Russia towards the north and east, always following the progress of cultivation. It made its first appearance on the Irtisch in Tobolsk, soon after the Russians had ploughed the land. It came in 1735 up the Obi to Beresow, and four years after to Naryn, about fifteen degrees of longitude farther east. In 1710 it had been seen in the higher parts of the course of the Lena, in the...
Page 33 - The natural (or merely worldly-wise) man, receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God ; for they are foolishness unto him : neither can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned." They are "hid from the wise and prudent, and revealed unto babes...
Page 138 - Could the myriads around you be suddenly magnified, you would swoon at the crowd of monsters gobbling, crunching, butting, stabbing, and generally making at, dodging, circumventing, murdering, and eating one another. Every lawn is a battle-field ; every flower-bed a grave ; every shrub a barrack. But it is Lilliput, and you smoke the pipe of peace. Did you ever see a drop of water — they said it was water — by the help of the solar microscope at the Polytechnic, or elsewhere ? I remember the...
Page 146 - Some insects are endowed with an appetite so keen, and a digestion so rapid, that they eat incessantly throughout the whole of their lives. They begin as soon as they are born, and go steadily on till they die. Their existence is a feast, without a change of plates, or a pause between the courses. Morning, noon, and night, their mouths are full, and an endless procession of favourite food gratifies the unwearied palate.