More's friends were all in attendance, and, after breakfasting together, had actually proceeded to the church where, by appointment, they were to meet the bridegroom. They actually waited above an hour in the porch, looking out for his arrival, and as... Tait's Edinburgh Magazine - Page 300publié par - 1834Affichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
 | 1835
...family. We now proceed on more romantic, but less veracious testimony. The speaker is the hero of Tait. " I have received the following as the true fact from...make such reparation as could be made, in a pecuniary sense, to Miss More ; but this intention, if he really had it at the time, would, no doubt, have died... | |
 | Clara Lucas Balfour - 1854 - 60 pages
...They actually waited an hour in the porch looking for his arrival ; and, as yet, with no suspicions of his dishonourable intentions. At length a single...the steps, dismounted, and presented to Miss More a • Literary Recollections: Taifs Magazine, vol. vi. 1839. E letter, in which the gentleman pleaded... | |
 | Joseph Johnson - 1860
...They actually waited an hour in the porch looking for his arrival; and, as yet, with no suspicions of his dishonourable intentions. At length a single...pleaded simply, as a reason for receding from his engagement, that he could not bring his mind, at the hour of crisis, to so solemn and irrevocable a... | |
 | Clara Lucas Balfour - 1869
...They actually waited an hour in the porch looking for his arrival ; and, as yet, with no suspicions of his dishonourable intentions. At length a single...the steps, dismounted, and presented to Miss More a * J iterary Recollections: Taifs Magazine, vol. vi. 1839. letter, in which the gentleman pleaded simply,... | |
 | DAVID MASSON - 1890
...respectability, and a fervent friend of Mrs. H. More's : — The morning was fixed for the marriage ; Mrs. More's friends were all in attendance, and, after...make such reparation as could be made, in a pecuniary sense, to Miss More ; but this intention, if he really had it at the time, would, no doubt, have died... | |
 | Thomas De Quincey - 1890
...respectability, and a fervent friend of Mrs. H. More's : — The morning was fixed for the marriage ; Mrs. More's friends were all in attendance, and, after...crisis, to so solemn and so irrevocable a contract. He oflfered, however, to make such reparation as could be made, in a pecuniary sense, to Miss More ; but... | |
 | Thomas De Quincey, David Masson - 1897
...respectability, and a fervent friend of Mrs. II. More's : -—The morning was fixed for the marriage ; Mrs. More's friends were all in attendance, and, after...make such reparation as could be made, in a pecuniary sense, to Miss More ; but this intention, if he really had it at the time, would, no doubt, have died... | |
 | REV. CHARLES BULLOCK - 1871
...They actually waited an hour in the porch looking for his arrival ; and, as yet, with no suspicions of his dishonourable intentions. At length a single...his mind, at the hour of crisis, to so solemn and irrevocable a contract." When this final^termination of the courtship occurred, the intimacy had lasted... | |
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