Walter Colyton: A Tale of 1688, Volume 3H. Colburn and R. Bentley, 1830 |
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Page 6
... leave me to manage every thing , for in these matters you are quite helpless . You must ride over immediately to Bridgwater— / see our poor dear boy , and learn from his own mouth the real state of the case , and in the mean time I will ...
... leave me to manage every thing , for in these matters you are quite helpless . You must ride over immediately to Bridgwater— / see our poor dear boy , and learn from his own mouth the real state of the case , and in the mean time I will ...
Page 14
... leave , having arranged nothing , except that a list of the officers of the Court Martial should be transmitted to him on the following day , in order that he might exert his influence in his son's favour , should any of them prove to ...
... leave , having arranged nothing , except that a list of the officers of the Court Martial should be transmitted to him on the following day , in order that he might exert his influence in his son's favour , should any of them prove to ...
Page 50
... leaving her mind , exhausted by the fierce struggle of her emotions , in a state of pitiable bewilderment and stupor . The ... leave these precious yet perilous relics thus exposed ? how could I forget the injunctions 50 WALTER COLYTON .
... leaving her mind , exhausted by the fierce struggle of her emotions , in a state of pitiable bewilderment and stupor . The ... leave these precious yet perilous relics thus exposed ? how could I forget the injunctions 50 WALTER COLYTON .
Page 65
... leaves , or the lulling sound of the waters , that seemed to warble responsively to the breeze . On the morning in question she had gathered a rose before she left home , and deliberately plucking off the leaves , she committed them one ...
... leaves , or the lulling sound of the waters , that seemed to warble responsively to the breeze . On the morning in question she had gathered a rose before she left home , and deliberately plucking off the leaves , she committed them one ...
Page 66
... leaves that announce the coming torpor of the winter , I see the prefigura- tion of my own approaching death . The smell of the grave is in my nostrils , and the brawling of this brook among the pebbles sounds in mine ears like the ...
... leaves that announce the coming torpor of the winter , I see the prefigura- tion of my own approaching death . The smell of the grave is in my nostrils , and the brawling of this brook among the pebbles sounds in mine ears like the ...
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Common terms and phrases
affections Agatha and Edith agitated Algernon Sidney anxiety army arrival attachment become bosom brave Bridgwater brother Bruges Captain Colyton chaise Chervil conceal confess Countess Countess of Dorchester court-martial cried dear Edith dearest Agatha death declared delight distress Edith Colyton ejaculated endeavoured England escape exclaimed Exeter eyes fate favour fear feelings Forester's girl gratitude grave Hales Court hand happy heart Heaven Hetty Hetty's honour hope horse hour hurried ingra instantly James Joe Stokes journey King King's knew lero less letter liberty Lilliburlero London look Lord Lord Churchill Lord Sunderland Mapletoft marriage ment mind monarch morning never night Noble Kinsmen object occasion Orchard Place pardon party passion perilous possessed present Prince of Orange prison procure Quaker Seagrave seemed sentence Shelton smallest spite Squire Stanley Forester sword tears tender thing thou thought tidings tion trust utter visitant Voorst Walter whole wife wishes