Evenings during the week he took her to see plays in which the brain-clutching heroine was rescued from the
palatial home of her guardian, who is cruelly after her bonds, by the hero with the beautiful sentiments.
So, they were always looking at
palatial residences in the best situations, and always very nearly taking or buying one, but never quite concluding the bargain.
Such is the king to whom Viking chieftains bowed their heads, and whom the modern and
palatial steamship defies with impunity seven times a week.
From earliest infancy it had been a cherished ambition of mine to be shaved some day in a
palatial barber- shop in Paris.
From his exalted position Passepartout observed with much curiosity the wide streets, the low, evenly ranged houses, the Anglo-Saxon Gothic churches, the great docks, the
palatial wooden and brick warehouses, the numerous conveyances, omnibuses, horse-cars, and upon the side-walks, not only Americans and Europeans, but Chinese and Indians.
The talk soon centred down to business, though Guggenhammer had first to say his say about the forthcoming international yacht race and about his own
palatial steam yacht, the Electra, whose recent engines were already antiquated.
The apartment was lofty and of almost
palatial proportions.
Meanwhile the man, having laid his wife in a chamber
palatial in comparison with that which the storm had blown about her ears, was congratulating her on her luck, and threatening the children with the most violent chastisement if they failed to behave themselves with strict propriety whilst they remained in that house.
All our exclusive citizens will recall the Perambulator Parade Dinner, in which Last-Trick Todd, at his
palatial home at Pilgrim's Pond, caused so many of our prominent debutantes to look even younger than their years.
There it was, too, within a stone's throw of the Harbour Office, low, but somehow
palatial, displaying its white, pillared pavilions surrounded by trim grass plots.
That envoy found her on a little square of carpet, so extremely diminutive in reference to the size of her stone and marble floor that she looked as if she might have had it spread for the trying on of a ready-made pair of shoes; or as if she had come into possession of the enchanted piece of carpet, bought for forty purses by one of the three princes in the Arabian Nights, and had that moment been transported on it, at a wish, into a
palatial saloon with which it had no connection.
The greater then was my surprise to enter a hall paved in black and white marble and in its dimness appearing of
palatial proportions.