In the meantime Eliot, his heart burning within him at his sister's being gazed at as a spectacle by that man of all the world from whose eye he would have sheltered her, was persuading her, as he would a wayward child, to leave the apartment. She resisted... The Linwoods: Or, "Sixty Years Since" in America - Page 58by Catharine Maria Sedgwick - 1835 - 944 pagesFull view - About this book
| Catharine Maria Sedgwick - American loyalists - 1835 - 298 pages
...is idle to stay here to listen to these ravings," said Meredith, in a low voice, to Miss Linwood ; and he was about to make his escape, when Isabella...Eliot," she said, " you know not what you ask of me. For this hour my life has been prolonged, my strength miraculously sustained. You have all been assembled... | |
| Catharine Maria Sedgwick - 1835 - 324 pages
...is idle to stay here to listen to these ravings," said Meredith, in a low voice, to Miss Linwood ; and he was about to make his escape, when Isabella...Eliot," she said, " you know not what you ask of me. For this hour my life has been prolonged, my strength miraculously sustained. You have all been assembled... | |
| Books - 1835 - 642 pages
...gratify these humours.' p "In the meantime Eliot, his heart burning within him at his sister* heing gazed at as a spectacle by that man of all the world...Eliot,' she said,' you know not what you ask of me. For this hour my life has been prolonged, my strength miraculously sustained. You have all been assembled... | |
| Jared Sparks, James Russell Lowell, Edward Everett, Henry Cabot Lodge - American fiction - 1836 - 588 pages
...said ; ' she has been very eager to see you, and it is sometimes of use to gratify these humors." " In the meantime Eliot, his heart burning within him...Eliot," she said, ' you know not what you ask of me. For this hour my life has been prolonged, my strength miraculously sustained. You have all been assembled... | |
| 1844 - 668 pages
...bis sister's being gazed at aa a spectacle by Ilia? man of all the worM from whose eye he would We sheltered her, was persuading her, as he would a wayward child, to leave the apartment. She reiisteĞl his importunities with a sort of gentle pity for his bliudness, and a perfect assurance... | |
| Rufus Wilmot Griswold - American prose literature - 1856 - 592 pages
...sometimes of use to gratify these humours." In the mean time Eliot, his heart burning within him at Iils sister's being gazed at as a spectacle by that man...Eliot,'' she said, "you know not what you ask of me. For this hour my life has been prolonged, my strength miraculously sustained. You have all been assembled... | |
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