The Complete Works of William Makepeace Thackeray: Vanity fairHoughton, Mifflin, 1889 |
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Seite 28
... castles , and put his Norman soldiers and knights into them . He and his people had it all their own way ; and though the English frequently re- belled , yet the King managed to quell all such disturbances , and reigned over us for one ...
... castles , and put his Norman soldiers and knights into them . He and his people had it all their own way ; and though the English frequently re- belled , yet the King managed to quell all such disturbances , and reigned over us for one ...
Seite 29
... castle vowing vengeance . This passionate and self - willed young man was called Courthose , which means in French short inex- pressibles , and he was said to have worn shorts , because his limbs were of that kind . Prince Shorts fled ...
... castle vowing vengeance . This passionate and self - willed young man was called Courthose , which means in French short inex- pressibles , and he was said to have worn shorts , because his limbs were of that kind . Prince Shorts fled ...
Seite 30
... was out of the great King's body , all the courtiers ran off to their castles expecting a war . All the abbots went to their abbeys , where they shut. sacring the Frenchmen , for he felt that his hour of death. 30 CONTRIBUTIONS TO PUNCH .
... was out of the great King's body , all the courtiers ran off to their castles expecting a war . All the abbots went to their abbeys , where they shut. sacring the Frenchmen , for he felt that his hour of death. 30 CONTRIBUTIONS TO PUNCH .
Seite 32
... castles and his father's money , and , so fortified , had himself pro- claimed King of England with- out any difficulty . Honest Robert remained Duke of Nor- mandy ; and as for the third son , Prince Henry , though not so handsomely ...
... castles and his father's money , and , so fortified , had himself pro- claimed King of England with- out any difficulty . Honest Robert remained Duke of Nor- mandy ; and as for the third son , Prince Henry , though not so handsomely ...
Seite 34
... castles from his brother Robert . At last he got possession of his whole dukedom ; for at this time all Europe was seized with a strange fit of frenzy and hatred against the Turks ; one Peter , a hermit , went abroad preaching hatred ...
... castles from his brother Robert . At last he got possession of his whole dukedom ; for at this time all Europe was seized with a strange fit of frenzy and hatred against the Turks ; one Peter , a hermit , went abroad preaching hatred ...
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army Bashi-Bazouks beautiful better Bobbachy Brighton British Britons Brown called Canute Captain carriage Castle Chartists Colonel Corn Laws Court creature dear dine dinner doubt Dragoman Duke Emperor England English Esquire eyes fancy father fellow fight FOLKSTONE footman French gent gentlemen Giaours give hand head hear heard heart honor horse Houri hundred Ingleez Irish John King Lady laugh LECTURE lion live London look Lord Majesty Mamma Margate married Master Spry Megatherium ment Miss Tickletoby murder never night Nimrod noble Oporto Palace paper pass person piastres picture poor port wine portmanteau present preter pretty Prince PUNCH Queen remarked round Royal Saint Saxon Sea-king seen servant Silistria Snobs Street thing thought thousand tion told took town Tuffskin walk Whigs wife woman wretched young Young Ireland
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 23 - King Canute was weary-hearted ; he had reigned for years a score, Battling, . struggling, pushing, fighting, killing much and robbing more, And he thought upon his actions, walking by the wild seashore. ''Twixt the Chancellor and Bishop walked the King with steps sedate ; Chamberlains and grooms came after, silversticks and goldsticks great ; Chaplains, aides-de-camp, and pages, — all the officers of state. ' Sliding after like his shadow, pausing when he chose to pause, If a frown his face contracted,...
Seite viii - I am afraid. I assure you these tokens of what I can't help acknowledging as popularity, make me humble as well as grateful, and make me feel an almost awful sense of the responsibility which falls upon a man in such a station.
Seite vi - I hate Juvenal; I mean I think him a truculent brute, and I love Horace better than you do, and rate Churchill much lower; and as for Swift, you haven't made me alter my opinion. I admire, or rather admit, his power as much as you do; but I don't admire that kind of power so much as I did fifteen years ago, or twenty shall we say. Love is a higher intellectual exercise than fiatred.
Seite 271 - To dispel that ignorance, to show how man can help man, notwithstanding the complicated state of civilized society, ought to be the aim of every philanthropic person; but it is more peculiarly the duty of those who, under the blessing of Divine Providence, enjoy station, wealth, and education.
Seite 208 - BRUNSWICK. He preferred Hanover to England, He preferred two hideous Mistresses To a beautiful and innocent Wife. He hated Arts and despised Literature ; But He liked train-oil in his salads, And gave an enlightened patronage to bad oysters. And he had Walpole as a Minister : Consistent in his Preference for every kind of Corruption.
Seite 188 - I came suddenly upon two ladies. " I made my bow, and begged leave to introduce myself as ' Mr. Brown.' " With a very slight inclination of the head, and no smile whatever, one of the ladies asked me if I had walked from town, and begged her companion (without introducing me to her) to show me in to lunch.
Seite viii - If you are grati I am gratior. Such tokens of regard and sympathy are very precious to a writer like myself, who have some difficulty still in making people understand what you have been good enough to find out in Edinburgh, that under the mask satirical there walks about a sentimental gentleman who means not unkindly to any mortal person.
Seite 205 - The tracts were put into glass bottles securely corked; and, taking advantage of the tide flowing into the harbor, they were committed to the waves, on whose surface they floated towards the town, where the inhabitants eagerly took them up on their arriving at the shore. The bottles were then uncorked, and the tracts they contain are supposed to have been read with much interest.
Seite 175 - Timotheus had not been an exceedingly sensible woman, would have caused jealousy between her and the great bard her husband. But, charming and beautiful herself, Mrs. Timotheus can even pardon another woman for being so ; nay, with perfect good sense, though possibly with a little factitious enthusiasm, she professes to share to its fullest extent the admiration of the illustrious Timotheus for the young beauty.