1 Every public place was new to Maria, and Brighton is almost as gay in winter as in summer.
Mansfield Park By Jane AustenGet Context In CHAPTER XXI 2 It was three months, full three months, since her quitting it, and the change was from winter to summer.
Mansfield Park By Jane AustenGet Context In CHAPTER XLVI 3 He wrote in April, and had strong hopes of settling everything to his entire satisfaction, and leaving Antigua before the end of the summer.
4 I had not, Miss Crawford, been an inattentive observer of what was passing between him and some part of this family in the summer and autumn.
Mansfield Park By Jane AustenGet Context In CHAPTER XXXVI 5 I should have thought so theoretically myself, but," and her eyes brightened as she spoke, "take it all and all, I never spent so happy a summer.
Mansfield Park By Jane AustenGet Context In CHAPTER XXII 6 After wandering about and sitting under trees with Fanny all the summer evenings, he had so well talked his mind into submission as to be very tolerably cheerful again.
Mansfield Park By Jane AustenGet Context In CHAPTER XLVIII 7 He particularly built upon a very happy summer and autumn there this year; he felt that it would be so: he depended upon it; a summer and autumn infinitely superior to the last.
Mansfield Park By Jane AustenGet Context In CHAPTER XLI 8 A young woman, pretty, lively, with a harp as elegant as herself, and both placed near a window, cut down to the ground, and opening on a little lawn, surrounded by shrubs in the rich foliage of summer, was enough to catch any man's heart.
Mansfield Park By Jane AustenGet Context In CHAPTER VII 9 Three years ago the Admiral, my honoured uncle, bought a cottage at Twickenham for us all to spend our summers in; and my aunt and I went down to it quite in raptures; but it being excessively pretty, it was soon found necessary to be improved, and for three months we were all dirt and confusion, without a gravel walk to step on, or a bench fit for use.