She the pink of flirtation, he the essence of everything that is outre and gloomy.
I have had one of the most outre conversations with him!
It was there that, in the leisure of his financial functions, between two projects of revictualling the forts of Outre Seine and Yonne, Grolier invented combinations, sought interlacings, and laid out foliage.
The readings of the "Memoires d'outre Tombe" spread over two years, and his fame extended so fast that it was difficult to find room for those who craved admittance.
Mes moult a de la outre bele tor, et s'il m'i voloient hebergier il m'i auroient encor ennuit a hoste.
A la grant dolor con li sist S'an passe outre et a grant destrece: Mains et genolz et piez se blece.
In Hyperion, Longfellow relates some of the experiences of his own travels under the guise of the hero, who wanders through Europe, and the book is full of the same biographical charm that belongs to Outre Mer.
The author of Outre Mer and Hyperion had well touched hands with millions of his brothers and sisters, and the clasp was never unloosed while he lived.
The enchanting seclusion was dear to him in these last years, during which his only work was the completion and touching-up of his "Memoires d'Outre Tombe.
I found, upon dropping down to this point, that the lights at Pass à L'Outre and South Pass had been strangely overlooked, and that they were still burning.
His costume of fringed buckskin was wild and outre even for our frontier camp.
Venetian Life belongs on the same shelf as Outre Mer and Views Afoot and Castilian Days--prose sketches with the golden light of youth upon them.
It will be no Outre Mer, we are certain of that, and no Pencillings by the Way.
Next he attempted prose in his Outre Mer, Driftwood Essays and the romances Hyperion and Kavanagh.
Strangely enough, the romantic influence of Europe was reflected by this poet in a book of prose essays, Outre Mer, modeled on Irving's Sketch Book.
These sketches he finally concluded to give to the public, under the title of "Outre Mer; or, Sketches from Beyond Sea.
He published "Outre Mer," and taught and wrote with such distinguished success that, on the resignation of George Ticknor, he was offered the chair of modern languages at Harvard.