Do we say baroness or barrenness

baroness 719 occurrences

She became Baroness Wentworth in November, 1856.

The women who attended on her toilette farther reported, that this gem was never removed but for a few minutes, when the baroness' hair was combed out; that she was unusually pensive and silent during the time it was laid aside, and particularly apprehensive when any liquid was brought near it.

In the course of twelve months the lovely baroness presented her husband with a daughter, which was to be christened Sibylla, after the count's mother.

This was the Baroness of Steinfeldt, famous in the neighbourhood for her insatiable curiosity and overweening pride.

She had not been many days in the castle, ere, by the aid of a female attendant, who acted as an intelligencer, she had made herself mistress of all that was heard, said, or suspected, concerning the peculiarities of the Baroness Hermione.

It was on the morning of the day appointed for the christening, while the whole company were assembled in the hall, and waiting till the baroness should appear, to pass with them to the chapel, that there arose between the censorious and haughty dame whom we have just mentioned, and the Countess Waldstettin, a violent discussion concerning some point of disputed precedence.

There was a general answer, utterly refusing to defend the Baroness of Steinfeldt's words in so bad a cause, and universally testifying the belief of the company that she spoke in the spirit of calumny and falsehood.

'Then let that lie fall to the ground which no man of courage will hold up,' said the Baron of Arnheim; 'only, all who are here this morning shall be satisfied whether the Baroness Hermione doth or doth not share the rites of Christianity.'

"The Baroness of Arnheim at this moment entered the hall, looking just so pale from her late confinement as to render her lovely countenance more interesting, if less animated, than usual.

Having paid her compliments to the assembled company, she was beginning to inquire why Madame de Steinfeldt was not present, when her husband made the signal for the company to move forward to the chapel, and lent the baroness his arm to bring up the rear.

The opal, on which one of these drops had lighted, shot out a brilliant spark like a falling star, and became the instant afterwards lightless and colourless as a common pebble, while the beautiful baroness sunk on the floor of the chapel with a deep sigh of pain.

There were few who were inclined to stay; when upon opening the door of the chamber in which the baroness had been deposited little more than two hours before, no traces of her could be discovered, unless that there was about a handful of light grey ashes, like such as might have been produced by burning fine paper, found on the bed where she had been laid.

TWO GOOD PATRIOTS, by Baroness Orczy.

R72544, 9Jan51, Mary E. Blain (A) BARSTOW, Mrs. MONTAGUE. SEE Orczy, Emmuska, baroness.

R87917, 26Dec51, W. E. Orchard (A) ORCZY, EMMUSKA, baroness.

R96522, 18Jun52, John Montague Orczy-Barstow (C) ORCZY, EMMUSKA, baroness.

R89276, 15Jan52, John Montague Orczy-Barstow (C) ORCZY, EMMUSKA, baroness.

R94826, 5May52, Haldeman-Julius Co. (PWH) VON HUTTEN, Baroness SEE Hutten zum Stolzenberg, Betsey (Riddle) freifrau von. VON SALTZA, PHILIP, illus.

R94767. SEE Orczy, Emmuska, baroness.

The carnival was going on, where no Viennese lady, so the baroness declared, would think of being seen, because confetti-throwing was only resorted to by the canaille (and officers and husbands of high-born ladies, who went there with their little friends of the ballet and chorus), but where we did go, contrary to all precedent, persuading the baroness to make up a smart party and "go slumming."

The carnival was going on, where no Viennese lady, so the baroness declared, would think of being seen, because confetti-throwing was only resorted to by the canaille (and officers and husbands of high-born ladies, who went there with their little friends of the ballet and chorus), but where we did go, contrary to all precedent, persuading the baroness to make up a smart party and "go slumming."

The baroness had such a beautiful evening that she quite sighed when it was over.

" "Exactly as it is with us," declared the baroness; "Carl and I always go in Paris and Nice, but herewell, we had to have you for an excuse.

"After all, it is so much more diverting to catch one's friends in mischief than strangers whom no one cares about!" I suppose, in showing Vienna to us, we showed more of Vienna to the baroness and her friends than they ever had seen before.

The baroness's brother, Count Georg Brunow, was an authority on dress, and, as he designed all the gowns for his cousin, who was also in the Emperor's suite, he begged permission to design Mrs. Jimmie's.

barrenness 182 occurrences

Who projected its irrigation, by which areas have been redeemed from barrenness and waste?

It needs but a slender thread of barrenness to make a mouse trail in the forest of the sod.

That of which we were almost weary ourselves, we did not expect any one to envy; and, therefore, supposed that we should be permitted to reside in Falkland's island, the undisputed lords of tempest-beaten barrenness.

Possibly the Wars of the Roses may in some measure account for the barrenness of the time; but I do not think they will explain it.

When we come, in the writings of one who has revealed masterdom, upon any passage that seems commonplace, or any figure that suggests nothing true, the part of wisdom is to brood over that point; for the probability is that the barrenness lies in us, two factors being necessary for the result of sightthe thing to be seen and the eye to see it.

It was horrible, if barrenness and danger could be so.'

The barrenness of discovery from Hipparchus to Ptolemy,the Alexandrian mathematician, astronomer, and geographer in the second century of the Christian era,in spite of the patronage of the royal Ptolemies of Egypt, was owing to the want of instruments for the accurate measure of time (like our clocks), to the imperfection of astronomical tables, and to the want of telescopes.

But it was not the barrenness of what he imagined was to be his new prison that held his eyes in staring inquiry on Croisset.

His compositions differ only terminorum positione from dreams; nothing but rude heaps of immaterial, incoherent, drossy, rubbishy stuff, promiscuously thrust up together; enough to infuse dulness and barrenness in conceit into him that is so prodigal of his ears as to give the hearing; enough to make a man's memory ache with suffering such dirty stuff cast into it.

For the western colony he had thrown open to settlement the vast area of the north-western coastal territory; and after relieving the Murchison from the stigma of barrenness that rested on it, he had discovered and made known all the rivers to the north and east, until the Oakover was reached.

"One year, thou shall find the vineyard dripping liquors precious as diamonds, while, the next, barrenness shall make it its seat.

There are, however, in fact, three interruptions to the continuity of this plain, though only one of them constitutes any considerable interruption to its barrenness.

In the latter of the two letters mentioned above he relates how his "verse-making faculties returned" to him, after long and unsuccessful struggles with "barrenness" and deep "dejection," as the result of drinking, "at the house of a neighbouring clergyman, ... so much wine, that I found some effort and dexterity requisite to balance myself on the hither edge of sobriety."

We must watch over these things and fix data, which will show that the theorizing of the past, has sprung mostly from the barrenness of observation.

It was the way he took to show his disciples, in a manner they should never forget, the inexorable condition upon which all life is given, and that the barren life, so soon as its barrenness is absolutely hopeless, becomes a literal death.

It is impossible not to be affected at thus meeting with these little unsheltered things, at the edge of eternal barrenness.

But a sour-faced white or a pompous bureaucrat paid her saving, and Chinese, who kept the restaurants, invoked the curse of barrenness upon the venders.

Yet always they excel your philosophers, insomuch as they accept the transcendental as really transcendental and do not profess to instruct the Almighty in it; and chiefly, perhaps, they excel your philosophers by opposing a creativeness, potential at any rate, against a certain and foredoomed barrenness.

'He turneth the rivers into a wilderness, and the water-springs into dry ground; a fruitful land into barrenness, for the wickedness of them that dwell therein.

That Anne of Austria, his mother, after twenty years of barrenness, had recourse to heaven, by her fervent prayers, to draw down that blessing, and addressed her devotions, in a particular manner, to this holy apostle of the Indies.

Barrenness was not the fault of the Father of English poetry; and amid the profusion of images which he presented, his imitator had only the task of rejecting or selecting.

As the result, barrenness came over my soul, which continued part of the next day.

In the spring of the great age of English song Spenser's note is like the voice of autumn, not the fruitful autumn of cornfield and orchard, but a premature barrenness of wet and fallen leaves

The change from all that barrenness and desolation to this beautiful, fertile country, covered with wild flowers and luxuriant live oaks, was as strong a contrast as one could imagine a sudden coming from purgatory to paradise in the space of a single hour.

Why has she (and her hands are clinched, and her breath comes thick), why has she been stricken with barrenness?

Do we say   baroness   or  barrenness