The boys' school; or, Traits of character in early life |
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Page 13
... father had done . " Besides , " said he , " I know none that are good ; and I have no wife to see that he attends to them , or they to him . " " You must send him to school then , " said the gentleman ; and he recommended Mr. Morton's ...
... father had done . " Besides , " said he , " I know none that are good ; and I have no wife to see that he attends to them , or they to him . " " You must send him to school then , " said the gentleman ; and he recommended Mr. Morton's ...
Page 43
... father and mother were well known to Mr. Austen , who was a kind friend to them . Thinking this boy cleverer than the rest of their children , with his assistance , they put him to a very good school , where he has been the last five or ...
... father and mother were well known to Mr. Austen , who was a kind friend to them . Thinking this boy cleverer than the rest of their children , with his assistance , they put him to a very good school , where he has been the last five or ...
Page 64
... father gives me plenty of money , and I have every thing I can require . Why do you want to send me away ? have I shown any inclination to go ? I would rather sit and talk with you , if you will give me leave ; for I know you can tell ...
... father gives me plenty of money , and I have every thing I can require . Why do you want to send me away ? have I shown any inclination to go ? I would rather sit and talk with you , if you will give me leave ; for I know you can tell ...
Page 83
... father , and brought it him to read . They sat down upon a bench , and perused it together . William thought that just such a letter would his parents have written , had they been alive ; and endeavoured to check a rising murmur , by ...
... father , and brought it him to read . They sat down upon a bench , and perused it together . William thought that just such a letter would his parents have written , had they been alive ; and endeavoured to check a rising murmur , by ...
Page 92
... the difficult path he was about to enter ; but more especially did he implore a right to call him Father and Friend , through the infinite merits of his blessed Son , ! CHAPTER XI . " The necessities of our condition require 92.
... the difficult path he was about to enter ; but more especially did he implore a right to call him Father and Friend , through the infinite merits of his blessed Son , ! CHAPTER XI . " The necessities of our condition require 92.
Common terms and phrases
acquaintance affection affectionate afford allow amiable amusement ance appearance Armenia Asia Minor asked assistance attention Austen Belmore Belmore's better blush CHAPTER companions conduct considered Constantinople continued counting-house COWPER dear boy dear uncle desire disappointed displeasure disposition distress Emily endea endeavoured expect expressed eyes father faults favour fear feel felt fluence folly forgive fortune friendship gave gentleman give good-natured happiness hear heard Henry Henry Thornton High-heeled shoes hope Howard hurt insult Journey kindness knew laugh liam lisp little Howard look Master Falkner ment mind misfortunes Miss Somers Morton never obliged occasion opinion parents Persia personal defects play-ground pleasure Poland possess procure received regret regu rence render replied William reproached returned William ridicule sentiments shew situation sure tell temper thing Thornton thought tion told uncle's wish wound
Popular passages
Page 78 - ONE there is, above all others, Well deserves the name of Friend ; His is love beyond a brother's, Costly, free, and knows no end.
Page 81 - And the ravens brought him bread and flesh in the morning, and bread and flesh in the evening; and he drank of the brook.
Page 93 - The necessities of our condition require a thousand offices of tenderness, which mere regard for the species will never dictate. Every man has frequent grievances which only the solicitude of friendship will discover and remedy, and which would remain for ever unheeded in the mighty heap of human calamity, were it only surveyed by the eye of general benevolence equally attentive to every misery.
Page 89 - The hint malevolent, the look oblique, The obvious satire, or implied dislike ; The sneer equivocal, the harsh reply, And all the cruel language of the eye ; The artful injury, whose...
Page 101 - Sees the gale of prosperity veering, Which promised to waft him to port. Our hopes are the gales that serenely Waft onward our sails as we float; Our tears are the whirlwinds that keenly O'erwhelm our poor perishing boat; And reason's the beacon that gives...
Page 116 - ... seldom of those things which habit has made common, otherwise we should correct many of them : there needed only 'to give one's feelings room on this theme, and they could prompt no other conduct than mine. Your approbation, however, is not lost upon me : the best of our resolutions are bettered, by a consciousness of the suffrage of good men in their favour ; and the reward is still higher, when that suffrage is from those we love.
Page 82 - Zacchaeus, make haste, and come down ; for to-day 1 must abide at thy house. 6 And he made haste, and came down, and received him joyfully.