Last GleaningsSampson Low, Son and Marston, 1864 - 257 pages |
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Page 65
... appear incredible . Books and bootjacks , vases and toilet bottles , have gone by the dozen ; and of three sets of fire - irons , which at different periods have been purchased for my chamber , only a single poker remains . E Now , why ...
... appear incredible . Books and bootjacks , vases and toilet bottles , have gone by the dozen ; and of three sets of fire - irons , which at different periods have been purchased for my chamber , only a single poker remains . E Now , why ...
Page 96
... appear . I was very fond of shooting , too , and wild duck abounded in the district where I was located . I used to walk along the reedy bank of a neighbour- ing creek and bring them down by dozens when- ever I felt inclined . Oh ! that ...
... appear . I was very fond of shooting , too , and wild duck abounded in the district where I was located . I used to walk along the reedy bank of a neighbour- ing creek and bring them down by dozens when- ever I felt inclined . Oh ! that ...
Page 175
... appears to have been a man of the old school - one worthy to be called an old boy . And what a fine phrase that is ! ' Old ' clings about the head , and ' boy ' about the heart . He was one of those antique gentlemen who are short ...
... appears to have been a man of the old school - one worthy to be called an old boy . And what a fine phrase that is ! ' Old ' clings about the head , and ' boy ' about the heart . He was one of those antique gentlemen who are short ...
Page 181
... appears at Christ's Hospital to have been loved by his school - mates . Boys are always right in their affections ; and it is grateful to us to know , through Lamb's Diary , that the walls of the old cloisters used to echo with the ...
... appears at Christ's Hospital to have been loved by his school - mates . Boys are always right in their affections ; and it is grateful to us to know , through Lamb's Diary , that the walls of the old cloisters used to echo with the ...
Page 192
... appear to be fine specimens of clear reasoning , based on the broadest and soundest learning , and adorned with the most strictly - tested ornaments of a finely disciplined imagination . And here I may remark , that Coleridge's elabora ...
... appear to be fine specimens of clear reasoning , based on the broadest and soundest learning , and adorned with the most strictly - tested ornaments of a finely disciplined imagination . And here I may remark , that Coleridge's elabora ...
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Common terms and phrases
Apsley House beautiful began brooklet Bumpington busk called Charles Lamb cheek Christ's Hospital cold Coleridge Coleridge's colour dear door Douglas Jerrold Drury Lane Editor eyes face father fellow fingers Flunkeyism Fred Gardens Gelderquirk gentleman Gerunders give glass Golden Legend grave half hand hare head heard heart hedge hedgehog Jerrold joke Kitty Clive knew lady LAST GLEANINGS laugh lecture literary lives look Lord John Russell Lucrezia Borgia Madame Vestris mind morning mother moved murderer neighbour neighbourhood never night Nuisance Old Boy once poem poet poor Queen Mab quiet Quincey remember round seems Shablee shadows Sir Thomas smile snow sorrow standing stars strange street sweet tavern tell theatre thing Thomas Hare thought tion told took walked wife wine wonder word write young
Popular passages
Page 137 - Hear the sledges with the bells Silver bells! What a world of merriment their melody foretells! How they tinkle, tinkle, tinkle, In the icy air of night! While the stars that oversprinkle All the heavens, seem to twinkle With a crystalline delight...
Page 2 - FORASMUCH as it hath pleased Almighty God of his great mercy to take unto himself the soul of our dear brother here departed, we therefore commit his body to the ground, earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust...
Page 222 - Here hung those lips that I have kissed I know not how oft. Where be your gibes now? your gambols? your songs? your flashes of merriment, that were wont to set the table on a roar?
Page 179 - I was very miserable. For Molly, who had nursed my brother Francis, and was immoderately fond of him, hated me because my mother took more notice of me than of Frank, and Frank hated me because my mother gave me now and then a bit of cake, when he had none...
Page 176 - Dining in a large party, one day, the modest divine was suddenly shocked by perceiving some part, as he conceived, of his own snowy shirt emerging from a part of his habiliments, which we shall suppose to have been his waistcoat. It was not that; but for decorum we shall so call it. The stray portion of his supposed...
Page 84 - These to their softened hearts should bear The thought of what has been, And speak of one who cannot share The gladness of the scene ; Whose part in all the pomp that fills The circuit of the summer hills, Is — that his grave is green ! And deeply would their hearts rejoice To hear again his living voice.
Page 177 - ... and so voluminously, that a very small portion of it, indeed, remained for the lady's own use; the natural consequence of which was, of course, that the lady appeared almost inextricably yoked to the learned theologian, and could not in any way effect her release, until after certain operations upon the vicar's dress, and a continued refunding and rolling out of snowy mazes...
Page 31 - If she be dead, then take my horse, My saddle and bridle also -, For I will into some far country, Where no man shall me know." " O stay, O stay, thou goodly youth, She standeth by thy side ; She is here alive, she is not dead, And ready to be thy bride.
Page 177 - REMINISCENCES laboriously stowing away into the capacious receptacles of his own habiliments — under the delusion that it was his own shirt — the snowy folds of a lady's gown, belonging to his next neighbour ; and so voluminously that a very small portion of it, indeed, remained for the lady's own use ; the natural consequence of which was, of course, that the lady appeared inextricably yoked to the learned theologian, and could not in any way effect her release, until after certain operations...
Page 184 - I'll let a Frenchman run me through the body before I'll run away.' ' That will do,' said the general, and Coleridge was turned into the ranks.