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Side 17
... Jane Lane , so I think he will be able to carry me , " replied Jasper . And assisted by Trusty Dick , he sprang up behind the king . Robin's broad back afforded a very comfortable seat , and the page held on securely by the king's ...
... Jane Lane , so I think he will be able to carry me , " replied Jasper . And assisted by Trusty Dick , he sprang up behind the king . Robin's broad back afforded a very comfortable seat , and the page held on securely by the king's ...
Side 30
... Jane Lane , who is devoted to your majesty , and whom I love dearly as a daughter , has just sent a message to me to say that her brother has obtained a pass from Captain Stone , governor of Stafford , for herself and a groom to go into ...
... Jane Lane , who is devoted to your majesty , and whom I love dearly as a daughter , has just sent a message to me to say that her brother has obtained a pass from Captain Stone , governor of Stafford , for herself and a groom to go into ...
Side 31
... Jane Lane is ready to set forth on her journey . " " Good , " replied the king . " Does Lord Wilmot's proposition meet with your approval ? " he added to Careless . " Perfectly , " was the reply . " If your majesty can dispense with my ...
... Jane Lane is ready to set forth on her journey . " " Good , " replied the king . " Does Lord Wilmot's proposition meet with your approval ? " he added to Careless . " Perfectly , " was the reply . " If your majesty can dispense with my ...
Side 79
... JANE LANE . I. BY WHOM THE TWO SPIES WERE PUT TO FLIGHT . IN order that they might watch the proceedings of the two spies , Father Huddlestone took the king to his own room , the windows of which commanded the rear of the house . For a ...
... JANE LANE . I. BY WHOM THE TWO SPIES WERE PUT TO FLIGHT . IN order that they might watch the proceedings of the two spies , Father Huddlestone took the king to his own room , the windows of which commanded the rear of the house . For a ...
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Abbots Leigh Albert Nyanza Alexandretta Alice appearance arrived Ashton Ashton Keynes beautiful Bhamo Captain Ellesdon Cavalier Charmouth church Colonel Lane Colonel Wyndham cried Charles Dame Gives David Price Dent Blanche door Euphrates exclaimed Father Huddlestone favour feel France Gillioz gone groom hand Harry Peters heard Heaven honour hope horse hour Jane Lane Jones Juliana king king's Krasnovodsk lady Lake liege Limbry looked Lord Chamberlain Lord Wilmot Lualaba Lyme Madmannah majesty majesty's Major Careless mansion miles mistress morning Morton Moseley Old Hall mountain Naggington never night Ninetta officer once Packington Hall party passed Petre Pope present princess proceeded rejoined remarked replied returned ride river rocks rode Roundhead route servants side Sir Clement Sir John Berkeley sire soon stable stood thee thou thought took town Trent troopers valley Whitgreave words young
Populære avsnitt
Side 308 - Yea, let him take all, forasmuch as my Lord the king is come again in peace to his own house.
Side 214 - ... soon ; that the political and commercial advantages of establishing a second route would at any time be considerable, and might, under possible circumstances, be exceedingly great, and that it would be worth the while of the English Government to make an effort to secure them, considering the moderate pecuniary risk which they would incur.
Side 346 - Father, I have heard many great orators in this chapel ; I have been highly pleased with them ; but for you, whenever I hear you, I go away displeased with myself; for I see more of my own character.
Side 270 - till they had been assur'd they might do it, without the Risque of an Insult, to their Modesty; or, if their Curiosity were too strong, for their Patience, they took care, at least, to save Appearances, and rarely came upon the first Days of Acting, but in Masks...
Side 377 - Man's love is of man's life a thing apart, "Tis woman's whole existence; man may range The court, camp, church, the vessel, and the mart; Sword, gown, gain, glory, offer in exchange Pride, fame, ambition, to fill up his heart, And few there are whom these cannot estrange; Men have all these resources, we but one, To love again, and be again undone.
Side 266 - Then he said unto them, Go your way, eat the fat, and drink the sweet, and send portions unto them for whom nothing is prepared: for this day is holy unto our Lord: neither be ye sorry; for the joy of the LORD is your strength.
Side 34 - Party is a body of men united, for promoting by their joint endeavours the national interest, upon some particular principle in which they are all agreed.
Side 270 - I remember the ladies were then observed to be decently afraid of venturing bare-faced to a new comedy, till they had been assured they might do it without...
Side 446 - ... his heel, but did not check him. There stands the stone, deeply plunged in the earth, to prove the truth of the legend." Passing through the outer circle of smaller stones, they dismounted, and fastening up their horses to an obelisk-shaped fragment, surveyed the mighty ruin, examining the trilithons and monoliths. " There is a superstition," observed Careless, " that these stones cannot be counted alike twice.
Side 214 - ... purposes it would lie with the other ; that it may fairly be expected that in process of time traffic enough for the support of both would develop* itself, but that this result must not be expected too soon...