The rifleman; or, Adventures of Percy Blake, Volum 4731858 |
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Side 9
... advance , and the writing on the wall is lost in the splendour of imagination and the dreams of a heated fancy ! I shall never forget the day I rode out of Tipperary on this my first start in life , at a period when other boys were ...
... advance , and the writing on the wall is lost in the splendour of imagination and the dreams of a heated fancy ! I shall never forget the day I rode out of Tipperary on this my first start in life , at a period when other boys were ...
Side 27
... advance my suit , which I did with all the ardour of a boy of sixteen , but without any of the dexterity that most speedily wins the favour of the fair . " I was , however , the chosen beau and preux chevalier of la belle Harriette , as ...
... advance my suit , which I did with all the ardour of a boy of sixteen , but without any of the dexterity that most speedily wins the favour of the fair . " I was , however , the chosen beau and preux chevalier of la belle Harriette , as ...
Side 28
... side of his ledger , an occasional remittance from my brother always enabled me to book up in time to save my credit , as a guarantee for a future advance , But still there was some little hitch in my happiness 28 THE YOUNG RIFLEMAN .
... side of his ledger , an occasional remittance from my brother always enabled me to book up in time to save my credit , as a guarantee for a future advance , But still there was some little hitch in my happiness 28 THE YOUNG RIFLEMAN .
Side 30
... Advance , friend , " said the sentry , " and give the countersign . " I advanced close up to the sentry , and whispering the countersign in his ear , walked on . " Pass , friend ! " cried the sentry , " and all's well . " This little ...
... Advance , friend , " said the sentry , " and give the countersign . " I advanced close up to the sentry , and whispering the countersign in his ear , walked on . " Pass , friend ! " cried the sentry , " and all's well . " This little ...
Side 58
... advance , how- ever , was uninterrupted by the enemy , till we got nearly within range of the guns at Flushing ; and then , occasionally , a spent eighteen or twenty - four pounder would bury itself in the ground , near our line of ...
... advance , how- ever , was uninterrupted by the enemy , till we got nearly within range of the guns at Flushing ; and then , occasionally , a spent eighteen or twenty - four pounder would bury itself in the ground , near our line of ...
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The Rifleman; Or, Adventures of Percy Blake ... New Edition Michael RAFTER Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1858 |
The Rifleman: Or Adventures of Percy Blake (Classic Reprint) Michael Rafter Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2015 |
The Rifleman: Or Adventures of Percy Blake (Classic Reprint) Michael Rafter Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2018 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
accordingly amidst amongst amusement arms army arrived barracks beautiful Brahmin called cantonment Captain CHAPTER Ciudad Rodrigo colonel command Corunna cried Croker dear delight demanded Diego Don Pedro Doña Maria dozen enemy exclaimed eyes fancy favour fcap fellow fire French gave gazed hand happy head heart heaven Honoria honour hope Hopkins horses Jack Dillon Julia Juliana jungle Jupiter lady laughing length light Lisbon lofty look Lord Lord Wellington Luddites Madras Massena morning Netherby never night Norman Cross occasion officers party Percy Blake picket Pindarries poor Portuguese provost marshal Pulicat Purseram Bhow rajah reader regiment replied Conolly replied Dillon Rochdale round rushed Sahib scene seemed sentry sergeant shot shouted side smile Snubley soldiers soon speedily stood thought thousand tirailleurs Tom King took Trimbuckjee troops uncle voice Walcheren whole wine young دو وو
Populære avsnitt
Side 69 - The Earl of Chatham, with his sword drawn Stood waiting for Sir Richard Strachan ; Sir Richard, longing to be at 'em, Stood waiting for the Earl of Chatham.
Side 265 - Pindarrees were encumbered neither with tents nor baggage; each horseman carried a few cakes of bread for his own subsistence, and some feeds of grain for his horse. The party, which usually consisted of two or three thousand good horse, with a proportion of mounted followers, advanced at the rapid rate of forty or fifty miles a day, turning neither to the right nor left till they arrived at their place of destination.
Side 211 - Then oh ! what pleasure, where'er we rove, To be doom'd to find something, still, that is dear, And to know, when far from the lips we love, We have but to make love to the lips we are near.