Still do I feel her graceful form press against my full-fraught heart — still does sight, and pulse, and breath sicken and fail, at the remembrance of that first kiss. ❋ Unknown (2003)
"Amen" and "amen," they seemed to say; and then the chime, full-fraught for him with promise, rang its constant message out, and as he listened his heart expanded with hope, his last earthly sorrow slipped away from him, and his soul relied upon the certainty that his final supplication was not in vain. ❋ Madame Sarah Grand (N/A)
Doch immer in den ohren ist -- and the ripples of undecipherable sound struck some equally inarticulate chord of sense, and fell full-fraught with association. ❋ Madame Sarah Grand (N/A)
It was Christmas Eve when they moved him, and late that night Beth kept her vigil by him, sitting over the fire with her elbows on her knees and her face between her hands, listening dreamily to the clang and clamour of the church-bells, which floated up to her over the snow, mellowed by distance and full-fraught with manifold associations. ❋ Sarah Grand (N/A)
And therefore, as in history looking for truth, they may go away full-fraught with falsehood, so in poesy looking but for fiction, they shall use the narration but as an imaginative groundplot of a profitable invention. ❋ Unknown (1909)
It appeareth in Seneca that he somewhat inclineth and yeeldeth to the tyrannie of the Emperors which were in his daies; for I verily believe, it is with a forced judgement he condemneth the cause of those noblie-minded murtherers of Cæsar; Plutarke is every where free and open hearted; Seneca full-fraught with points and sallies: Plutarke stuft with matters. ❋ Unknown (1909)
To win her; wooed her here, his heart full-fraught ❋ George Parsons Lathrop (1874)
All filled full of the war, full-fraught with battle and charged with bale; ❋ Algernon Charles Swinburne (1873)
Fleets full-fraught with storm from Persia, laden deep with death from Spain: ❋ Algernon Charles Swinburne (1873)
The prevailing tone and imagery of them are such as he would hardly have used but with a woman in his thoughts; they are full-fraught with deep personal feeling, as distinguished from exercises of fancy; and they speak, with unsurpassable tenderness, of frequent absences, such as, before the Sonnets were printed, the Poet had experienced from his wife. ❋ Hudson, H N (1872)
But know not what, full-fraught, the word doth mean. ❋ George MacDonald (1864)
The prevailing tone and imagery of them are such as he would hardly have used but with a woman in his thoughts; they are full-fraught with deep personal feeling, as distinguished from exercises of fancy; and they speak, with unsurpassable tenderness, of frequent absences, such as, before the ❋ Henry Norman Hudson (1850)
To the last, his heart was full-fraught with all tender reminiscences and associations. ❋ Unknown (1844)
Still do I feel her graceful form press against my full-fraught heart -- still does sight, and pulse, and breath sicken and fail, at the remembrance of that first kiss. ❋ Unknown (1826)
I held my life in jeopardy, because one man was unprincipled enough to assert what he knew to be false; I was destined to suffer an early and inexorable death from the hands of others, because none of them had penetration enough to distinguish from falsehood, what I uttered with the entire conviction of a full-fraught heart! ❋ William Godwin (1796)
Moreover, and certain it is, he not only crushed, and upon all occasions quelled the youth of this great man and his famous brethren, but therewith drew on his own fatal end, by undertaking the Irish action in a time when he left the Court empty of friends, and full-fraught with his professed enemies. ❋ Hentzner, Paul & Naunton, Robert (1641)
Seneca that he somewhat inclineth and yeeldeth to the tyrannic of the Emperors which were in his daies; for I verily believe, it is with a forced judgement he condemneth the cause of those noblie - minded murtherers of Caesar; Plutarke is every where free and open hearted; Seneca full-fraught with points and sallies; Plutarke stuft with matters. ❋ Various (1562)
Articulation ceased here because the startling theory that a vicious dissipated man is not a fallen angel easily picked up, but a frightful source of crime and disease, recurred to him, with the charitable suggestion that a repentant woman of his own class would be the proper person to reform him; ideas which settled upon his soul and silenced him, being full-fraught for him with the cruel certainty that the end of "all ❋ Madame Sarah Grand (N/A)