Below the surface [by sir A.H. Elton]. |
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... EDWARD S. PRYCE , B.A. Post 8vo . 6s . cloth . THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF LEIGH HUNT . Revised by HIMSELF . With Additional Chapters by his ELDEST SON . Post 8vo . With a Portrait engraved on Steel from an Original Drawing . 7s . 6d . cl ...
... EDWARD S. PRYCE , B.A. Post 8vo . 6s . cloth . THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF LEIGH HUNT . Revised by HIMSELF . With Additional Chapters by his ELDEST SON . Post 8vo . With a Portrait engraved on Steel from an Original Drawing . 7s . 6d . cl ...
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... . THE COURT OF SEWERS AT THE " SWAMPSHIRE ARMS " 180 XVII . SIR REGINALD CLINTON 186 • XVIII . LOST OR SAVED 193 · XIX . WAIFS AND STRAYS 206 · XX . EDWARD HARRILL 211 • CHAP . XXI . CLAWTHORP LUNATIC ASYLUM AT MIDNIGHT .
... . THE COURT OF SEWERS AT THE " SWAMPSHIRE ARMS " 180 XVII . SIR REGINALD CLINTON 186 • XVIII . LOST OR SAVED 193 · XIX . WAIFS AND STRAYS 206 · XX . EDWARD HARRILL 211 • CHAP . XXI . CLAWTHORP LUNATIC ASYLUM AT MIDNIGHT .
Page 28
... Edward out for a loaf , and he locks the door , or maybe the bairns would get into the road and be run over . " " I fear they disturb you . " " I can't say but they do that , Squire Nugent . Only , when Edward's at home he keeps them ...
... Edward out for a loaf , and he locks the door , or maybe the bairns would get into the road and be run over . " " I fear they disturb you . " " I can't say but they do that , Squire Nugent . Only , when Edward's at home he keeps them ...
Page 30
... Edward's hand , with a tract for him to read to Margaret , and then , shaking her by the hand , departed . He now struck across the fields until he reached the main road intersecting the valley , along which he proceeded about a mile ...
... Edward's hand , with a tract for him to read to Margaret , and then , shaking her by the hand , departed . He now struck across the fields until he reached the main road intersecting the valley , along which he proceeded about a mile ...
Page 48
... Edward had caught up a fourth child , the youngest of them , and , sitting on a low stool , hed him on his lap , and tried to pacify his cries . “ Oh , what will become of these little ones ? " asked Ger- trude . Mr. Lovell , the ...
... Edward had caught up a fourth child , the youngest of them , and , sitting on a low stool , hed him on his lap , and tried to pacify his cries . “ Oh , what will become of these little ones ? " asked Ger- trude . Mr. Lovell , the ...
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Common terms and phrases
Agatha answered anxiety Beaumont House began boudoir carriage chair CHARLOTTE BRONTE church Clawthorp countenance Crayfoot dark darling David Price dear dearest Delafield dinner doctor door drawing-room Edward excitement exclaimed Nugent eyes face Fazackerley feel felt Finchley Flintwood followed gentleman Gertrude Gertrude's going Grierson hand Harrill hastened hastily head heard heart horse husband Jessie La Fronde Lady Maud letter light looked Lovell Lovell's Lucy mamma Manor Farm Manor House marriage matter Maud's mind Miss Beverley Miss Seton mother never Nutt Okenham once parcel passed poor pretty rejoined Rentworth replied road round Rubbley seemed servants Sharker side Sir Eliot Prichard Sir Reginald Clinton Sludge smile soon Spottle suddenly Swampshire tears tell thing thought took turned Usherwood voice Weston whilst wife window Winthrop wish words workhouse yeomanry young
Popular passages
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Page 249 - DIM as the borrow'd beams of moon and stars To lonely, weary, wandering travellers, Is Reason to the soul : and as on high. Those rolling fires discover but the sky, Not light us here ; so Reason's glimmering ray Was lent, not to assure our doubtful way, But guide us upward to a better day.
Page 356 - He was a man, take him for all in all, we ne'er shall look upon his like again ! He was emphatically a man ! Ay, sir, a man.
Page 356 - That hangs his head, and a' that! The coward slave, we pass him by, We dare be poor for a' that! For a' that, and a' that, Our toils obscure, and a' that; The rank is but the guinea's stamp, The Man's the gowd for a
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