Felix Holt, the RadicalHarper, 1871 - 529 pages |
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Page 30
... live merely in small immediate cares and occupations , and , like all eager- minded women who advance in life without any activity of tenderness or any large sympathy , she had contracted small rigid habits of thinking and acting , she ...
... live merely in small immediate cares and occupations , and , like all eager- minded women who advance in life without any activity of tenderness or any large sympathy , she had contracted small rigid habits of thinking and acting , she ...
Page 34
... live to be eighty , that every body is cap in hand to you before they know who you are - let me fasten up your veil a little higher : there's a good deal of pleasure in life for you yet . " " Nonsense ! there's no pleasure for old women ...
... live to be eighty , that every body is cap in hand to you before they know who you are - let me fasten up your veil a little higher : there's a good deal of pleasure in life for you yet . " " Nonsense ! there's no pleasure for old women ...
Page 59
... lives we are about to look back upon do not belong to those conservatory species ; they are rooted in the common earth , having to endure all the ordinary chances of past and present weather . As to the weather of 1832 , the Zadkiel of ...
... lives we are about to look back upon do not belong to those conservatory species ; they are rooted in the common earth , having to endure all the ordinary chances of past and present weather . As to the weather of 1832 , the Zadkiel of ...
Page 61
... make Dissent additionally preposterous . But he was too short - sighted to notice those who tittered at him - too absent from the world of small facts and petty impulses in which titterers live . With THE RADICAL . 61 CHAPTER IV. ...
... make Dissent additionally preposterous . But he was too short - sighted to notice those who tittered at him - too absent from the world of small facts and petty impulses in which titterers live . With THE RADICAL . 61 CHAPTER IV. ...
Page 62
George Eliot. facts and petty impulses in which titterers live . With Sa- tan to argue against on matters of vital experience as well as of Church government , with great texts to meditate on , which seemed to get deeper as he tried to ...
George Eliot. facts and petty impulses in which titterers live . With Sa- tan to argue against on matters of vital experience as well as of Church government , with great texts to meditate on , which seemed to get deeper as he tried to ...
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Common terms and phrases
50 cents believe better Bycliffe called chair Christian Chubb Church Cloth constables dear Debarry Debarry's Denner Dissenting door Duffield Esther eyes face father feeling Felix Holt fellow felt Garstin gentleman give good-morning hand Harold Transome head hear heard Holt's hope James Clement Jermyn JOHN S. C. ABBOTT Johnson knew lady Lingon live LL.D looked Lyddy Malthouse Yard marry ment mind minister Miss Lyon morning mother Muscat never North Loamshire once paused perhaps person Philip political poor question Radical Rector round seated seemed sense side Sir Maximus smiling sort speak spirit Spratt Sproxton suppose sure talk tell there's thing thought tion Tommy tone took Tory Transome Court Transome's Trebian Treby Magna Trounsem truth turned understrapper voice vols vote Wace walk Whig wish woman words young
Popular passages
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Page 381 - I also could speak as ye do: if your soul were in my soul's stead, I could heap up words against you, and shake mine head at you.
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Page 87 - That is the lot Miss Esther is preparing for some man or other. I could grind my teeth at such self-satisfied minxes, who think they can tell every body what is the correct thing, and the utmost stretch of their ideas will not place them on a level with the intelligent fleas. I should like to see if she could be made ashamed of herself.
Page 142 - Cependant je sens que j'aime la monotonie des sentiments de la vie, et si j'avais encore la folie de croire au bonheur, je le chercherais dans l'habitude.
Page 105 - For she is dead!" Thy words do pierce my soul! Ah, sweet Theridamas! say so no more; Though she be dead, yet let me think she lives, And feed my mind that dies for want of her.
Page 59 - ... there is no private life which has not been determined by a wider public life, from the time when the primeval milkmaid had to wander with the wanderings of her clan, because the cow she milked was one of a herd which had made the pastures bare.