The Lady's Miscellany, Or, Weekly Visitor, for the Use and Amusement of Both Sexes, Τόμος 13M'Carty & White, 1811 |
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Colleen Dunn, Compiled by: Suzanne Saunders. God Gave Me a Voice God gave me a voice, To Him will I sing. I'll chant to the heavens, The joy that life brings. God whispers at morning, To let out a song, So I just keep singing The whole ...
Colleen Dunn, Compiled by: Suzanne Saunders. God Gave Me a Voice God gave me a voice, To Him will I sing. I'll chant to the heavens, The joy that life brings. God whispers at morning, To let out a song, So I just keep singing The whole ...
Σελίδα 2
... GAVE US THE BIBLE All Scripture stories , quotations , and paraphrases are taken from the Holy Bible , New International Version , NIV " . Copyright © 1973 , 1978 , 1984 , 2011 by Biblica Inc. " Used by permission . All rights reserved ...
... GAVE US THE BIBLE All Scripture stories , quotations , and paraphrases are taken from the Holy Bible , New International Version , NIV " . Copyright © 1973 , 1978 , 1984 , 2011 by Biblica Inc. " Used by permission . All rights reserved ...
Σελίδα
... gave him a blank stare before responding, “Well talking right now doesn't seem like the smartest idea when I'm on my way to work.” “Okay,” Javon agreed. “When you come back.” “Alright,” she said with an exhale. “But we really do need to ...
... gave him a blank stare before responding, “Well talking right now doesn't seem like the smartest idea when I'm on my way to work.” “Okay,” Javon agreed. “When you come back.” “Alright,” she said with an exhale. “But we really do need to ...
Σελίδα
... 3519-5 Illustrations by Becky Kelly Design by Stephanie R. Farley Edited by Jean Lowe Production by Elizabeth Nuelle For my mother . -P.R. My Mother Gave Me the My Mother Gave Me the Moon illustrations copyright © 2003 ...
... 3519-5 Illustrations by Becky Kelly Design by Stephanie R. Farley Edited by Jean Lowe Production by Elizabeth Nuelle For my mother . -P.R. My Mother Gave Me the My Mother Gave Me the Moon illustrations copyright © 2003 ...
Σελίδα xiii
... gave me shelter A kindled fireplace , a warm heart When I had sought a bit of comfort A place in which my memories to park He gave me shelter When I had lost hope Losing sight of tomorrow And allowing my head to mope He gave me shelter ...
... gave me shelter A kindled fireplace , a warm heart When I had sought a bit of comfort A place in which my memories to park He gave me shelter When I had lost hope Losing sight of tomorrow And allowing my head to mope He gave me shelter ...
Άλλες εκδόσεις - Προβολή όλων
Συχνά εμφανιζόμενοι όροι και φράσεις
317 Water-street aged Albudor amiable ance appeared Arrah Audley Aylesbury boar Bologna Brantingham caliph calm Caroline ceived company tickets Convent Count Vizzani Daniel DANIEL DANCER daugh daughter death despair Diggs dreadful Dugazon encouragement by applying Eugenio exclaimed eyes fatal Father Genaro Free Masons gave genio gentleman grave grief hand & deposits happy heart Heaven Herbert inex inst John John Bowman lady LADY'S MISCELLANY Thomas land Also lets late Laurina lets & leases liberaly paid lived Lord Morton maize Marquis MISCELLANY Thomas H Miss Mohdi monastery Monk morning neighbour ness never New-York o'clock observed pier heads procure replied retired Rosalia rushed sale 30 farms Saturday sigh silence sister sleep soon sorrow soul Spanozzi struck tears tender thee ther Thomas H thou tickets & draw tion treal Virginia voice wife wigwam worthy wound young youth
Δημοφιλή αποσπάσματα
Σελίδα 188 - Tis the very thing," said the merchant, " and I must have forgotten to put the hole in the middle .''r LOGIC.
Σελίδα 220 - Cheerfulness is the daughter of employment; and I have known a man come home, in high spirits, from a funeral, merely because he has had the management of it.
Σελίδα 218 - His father was a man of that strictness of conscience, that he gave over the practice of the law, because he could not understand the reason of giving colour in pleadings, which as he thought was to tell a lie ; and that, with some other things commonly practised, seemed to him contrary to that exactness of truth and justice which became a Christian ; so that he withdrew himself from the inns of court, to live on his estate in the country.
Σελίδα 218 - Boerhaave, through life, consecrated the first hour after he rose in the morning to meditation and prayer ; declaring, that from thence he derived vigour and aptitude for business, together with equanimity under provocations, and a perfect conquest over his irascible passions.
Σελίδα 220 - Plutarch tells us, when dinner was ended in the camp, while others either went to sleep, or were disquieting their minds with apprehensions concerning the approaching battle, Brutus employed himself in writing till the evening, composing an epitome of Polybius.
Σελίδα 188 - Stop there," says the customer, " I never had a cheese of you or any other person : I make my own cheese." " You certainly must have had it," said the merchant,
Σελίδα 219 - Stage," relates the follorfring anecdote, which may be true, or may be nothing more than a lively invention : — A woman of fashion in London had a great desire to procure the portrait of a nobleman with whom she was in love, but who had a particular aversion to sit for his picture. She prevailed upon Garrick to notice the face of this lord, and so possess himself of his features that the painter might easily design a faithful likeness, through the medium of his borrowed resemblance. This was undertaken,...
Σελίδα 219 - The sparks of calumny," he would say, " will be presently extinct of themselves, unless you blow them — (Spreta exoleietmt; li iratcare, ignita eidentttr,) and therefore, in return, he chose rather to commend the good qualities of his calumniators (if they had any) than to dwell upon the bad."— Life, p.
Σελίδα 219 - ... might easily design a faithful likeness, through the medium of his borrowed resemblance. This was undertaken, and after having studied every trait and gesture, and each possible manner of giving them variety, till it was no longer Garrick, but My Lord, the painter was set to work, and succeeded so well that the portrait was universally known for the nobleman in question, who was the first to express his astonishment at so perfect a likeness being obtained without his knowledge. The story goes...