At any cost, by Edward Garrett |
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Page 11
... course of nature , it must be the will of God , ' said the brave little woman to herself ; ' and if one lets one's self begin to cry out against that , one never knows where one may end . ' It troubled her sorely that during the ...
... course of nature , it must be the will of God , ' said the brave little woman to herself ; ' and if one lets one's self begin to cry out against that , one never knows where one may end . ' It troubled her sorely that during the ...
Page 14
... course we don't want you to be writing letters home when it is your duty to be doing anything else , ' she added , with true love's ready alarm and reluctance lest it become a drag and a fetter on the progress of active life ; but a ...
... course we don't want you to be writing letters home when it is your duty to be doing anything else , ' she added , with true love's ready alarm and reluctance lest it become a drag and a fetter on the progress of active life ; but a ...
Page 15
... course , I must not hinder you . I think I'll leave you at the Moull . I have just a few words to say yet - I won't take long about them . Robert , my boy , I and your father pray that you may prosper with God's blessing , but that you ...
... course , I must not hinder you . I think I'll leave you at the Moull . I have just a few words to say yet - I won't take long about them . Robert , my boy , I and your father pray that you may prosper with God's blessing , but that you ...
Page 16
Isabella Fyvie Mayo. ' Of course I will , mother , if I see any , ' said the lad ; ' but it is scarcely likely that such will come my way . ' ' What we are looking for is always to be seen sooner or later , and those in London are at the ...
Isabella Fyvie Mayo. ' Of course I will , mother , if I see any , ' said the lad ; ' but it is scarcely likely that such will come my way . ' ' What we are looking for is always to be seen sooner or later , and those in London are at the ...
Page 18
... course , Mrs. Sinclair was quite above all belief in the mischievous fairies , the mysterious tangies , ' or ghostly ponies , and other grotesque creations of the simple local imagination , yet in the darkness of a moonless night it ...
... course , Mrs. Sinclair was quite above all belief in the mischievous fairies , the mysterious tangies , ' or ghostly ponies , and other grotesque creations of the simple local imagination , yet in the darkness of a moonless night it ...
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Common terms and phrases
Aldersyde answered asked beautiful believe Ben Hanson better Bible Black Brander Captain Carson cashie character Christmas Clegga Farm COST Dan Corbett dark daughter dear duty Edinburgh Ellon Etta eyes face father fear feeling felt friends gave girl give glad gone Grace Allan hand Hannah heard heart hope human interest island Jane kindly Kirkwall Kirsty Mail Kirsty's knew lady laughed Lerwick lived London looked master mind Miss mother never night Olive Ollison once one's Ormolu Square peat Penman's Row perhaps Peter Sandison poor Preston Tower pretty quiet Quodda Robert Sinclair scarcely Scottish seemed shawl Shetland silent smile sort Stockley story strange sundry sure tell there's things thought told Tom Ollison Tom waited Tom's true turned walk Whig wife woman wonder words young Yunson
Popular passages
Page 78 - Servants, be obedient to them that are your masters according to the flesh, with fear and trembling, in singleness of your heart, as unto Christ...
Page 300 - Thus saith the LORD of hosts: There shall yet old men and old women dwell in the streets of Jerusalem, and every man with his staff in his hand for very age. And the streets of the city shall be full of boys and girls playing in the streets thereof.
Page 78 - With good will doing service, as to the Lord, and not to men: Knowing that whatsoever good thing any man doeth, the same shall be receive of the Lord, whether he be bond or free.
Page 308 - The central figure in the narrative is Miss Janet Nesbit, of Aldersyde, a young gentlewoman who is early called to a life of self-sacrifice. This she humbly accepts, working out the problem with so much sincerity and faithfulness that the grey morning is followed by a bright day.
Page 173 - Little Jack Horner Sat in a corner Eating a Christmas pie; He put in his thumb, And pulled out a plum, And said, "What a good boy am I!
Page 310 - The pages are full of pen portraits, which must have been drawn from nature. Mission-work, as presented to us in this little volume, means very much more than a good story. The Christian heart, yearning over the...
Page 310 - A capitally written sketch of Scottish city life among the humbler classes.' — Christian. ' The story is an incident of city mission-work, and it is capitally told. It is a book which should find a place in every Sunday school or temperance library.
Page 308 - Hurrah ! our good Scotch stories, with their dear rough old vernacular, are not going to die out just yet, or, if at all, they are going to die hard.
Page 308 - A book we must read through at a sitting. It lays hold of our interest in the first page, and sustains it to the end.' — Daily Review. ' Deserves to occupy a prominent and permanent place among Scottish works of imagination. . . . Not a dull page in the book ; while...