The Florence StoriesSheldon, 1867 |
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Page 47
... looking house standing end to the street , with a long paved yard extending along the side of it to neat looking stables in the rear . Madame Achard herself , a handsome and motherly look- ing woman of middle age , accompanied by a ...
... looking house standing end to the street , with a long paved yard extending along the side of it to neat looking stables in the rear . Madame Achard herself , a handsome and motherly look- ing woman of middle age , accompanied by a ...
Page 49
... looking young woman , dressed in the costume of the country , came to be paid for the chairs . It was one sou , that is to say , one cent for each person . In the French churches and cathedrals there are no pews 5 BAYEUX . 49.
... looking young woman , dressed in the costume of the country , came to be paid for the chairs . It was one sou , that is to say , one cent for each person . In the French churches and cathedrals there are no pews 5 BAYEUX . 49.
Page 54
... looking in they saw a large open court , with what seemed to be the library building on the farther side of it . On the left side of the entrance to the court was the porter's lodge . The porter , or rather the porteress - for it was a ...
... looking in they saw a large open court , with what seemed to be the library building on the farther side of it . On the left side of the entrance to the court was the porter's lodge . The porter , or rather the porteress - for it was a ...
Page 59
... looking as bright and well defined as if the work had but just been finished . And yet the linen itself had been worn and torn by age and hard usage , though all the rents and holes had been patched and repaired . The scenes represented ...
... looking as bright and well defined as if the work had but just been finished . And yet the linen itself had been worn and torn by age and hard usage , though all the rents and holes had been patched and repaired . The scenes represented ...
Page 62
... looking at the lace , and bargaining for it . Mrs. Morelle stopped and looked at some of the pieces , but did not buy any . Grimkie asked the girl if there was anything to pay for viewing the tapestry . She said noth- ing , unless they ...
... looking at the lace , and bargaining for it . Mrs. Morelle stopped and looked at some of the pieces , but did not buy any . Grimkie asked the girl if there was anything to pay for viewing the tapestry . She said noth- ing , unless they ...
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Common terms and phrases
asked Florence asked Grimkie aunt Auntie basin Bayeux Bayeux tapestry boat bobbins boys Caen Calais carriage castle Channel Islands Cherbourg coachman coast coupé Coutances deck Digue diligence door England English fire Florence and Grimkie Florence and John Folkstone formed France French frustrum girl Granville Grimkie and Florence Grimkie and John Grimkie told Grimkie's Guernsey handsome harbor hour houses immense Isle of Wight Jersey kind lace ladies land length lodgings looking Louvre Hotel Michel miles Mont Orgueil Mont St Morelle and Florence mother omnibus passed piers port pretty promontory quay rambling ride road rocks round route sail sand Sark seat seemed seen ships shoes shore side sidewalk smooth soldiers Spithead steamer stone stopped story street tapestry tide took tower town vessels walk walls William the Conqueror winding woman
Popular passages
Page 43 - Ocean, the first thing which strikes us is, that, the north-east and south-east monsoons, which are found the one on the north and the other on...
Page 33 - Lord ivas with me and made all things easy, though my dear friend and I were separated one at one end of the town and the other at the other, and both under locks and bolts ; the said Davis swearing desperately that we should never come out nor see one another again all his time. And yet in two weeks' time he let me out again and her also.
Page 183 - Grimkie said that the best thing they could do would be to go and see the Castle of Mont Orgueil.
Page 193 - Florence established herself upon the sofa, and the two boys in arm-chairs near the fire, each with a large slice of bread and butter in one hand and a piece of cheese in the other, and their tumblers of milk on corners of the table within reach.
Page 69 - There was a large table in the middle of the room, with broad boxes filled with laces upon it, and other boxes in cases about the room.
Page 80 - ... strongly support Senator Mitchell's bill, S. 1639. The establishment of a Board such as is proposed in your bill is vitally necessary in the interest of military and commercial expansion of our national air power. If is an open secret that in the 1930's technological improvements placed German air power far in advance of that of any other nation in the world, and the stern necessity of mastering that power, rather than our own foresight, was the determining factor in World War II. Certainly,...