Percy Blake; Or, The Young Rifleman, Volum 1Hurst and Blackett, 1855 |
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Side 17
... arrived . This , as a matter of course , was a fair - day , when vast numbers of the peasantry arrived from all quarters , with horses , black cattle , pigs , poultry , and other country produce for the market ; and at the same time ...
... arrived . This , as a matter of course , was a fair - day , when vast numbers of the peasantry arrived from all quarters , with horses , black cattle , pigs , poultry , and other country produce for the market ; and at the same time ...
Side 18
... arrival in our town of my maternal uncle ; who , having run away from school several years before , and enlisted as a private sol- dier , had returned to his native place in all the seductive glory of a recruiting - ser- geant . In ...
... arrival in our town of my maternal uncle ; who , having run away from school several years before , and enlisted as a private sol- dier , had returned to his native place in all the seductive glory of a recruiting - ser- geant . In ...
Side 40
... arrived at Chelmsford ; and having somewhat arranged my outward man , after my journey , at the inn where the coach stopped , I inquired my way to the barracks . On entering the gateway , the smart slap of the sentry on the butt of his ...
... arrived at Chelmsford ; and having somewhat arranged my outward man , after my journey , at the inn where the coach stopped , I inquired my way to the barracks . On entering the gateway , the smart slap of the sentry on the butt of his ...
Side 87
... arrived there , Norman Cross presented less the appearance of a prison than a fair . Amongst others , I availed myself of the opportunity to renew my French studies , which I prosecuted with much success . I also became a good fencer ...
... arrived there , Norman Cross presented less the appearance of a prison than a fair . Amongst others , I availed myself of the opportunity to renew my French studies , which I prosecuted with much success . I also became a good fencer ...
Side 107
... arrival of the mail which was to bear Adolphe to London , where he hoped to conceal himself till an opportunity offered for returning to the continent . Mean- while I was let into the secret of his escape . When his fellow - prisoners ...
... arrival of the mail which was to bear Adolphe to London , where he hoped to conceal himself till an opportunity offered for returning to the continent . Mean- while I was let into the secret of his escape . When his fellow - prisoners ...
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accordingly admirable adventures amongst amusement arms Baroness d'Oberkirch barrack beautiful began biography black crow BLACKETT'S NEW PUBLICATIONS Blake brother officers Bull called Captain Tomkins character colonel cried dance dear delight dozen duelling pistols exclaimed eyes fancy fellow Flushing Foley fortune French friend Richardson fright garrison give hand happy Harriet head heart honour HURST AND BLACKETT'S interesting judge King Lady Lancashire laughed length light looked Lord Luddites Magdalen Hepburn manner marched Marie de Medicis Marshal Saxe Mary memoir ment Middleburg military morning narrative Netherby never night Norman Cross numbers O'Flaherty occasion party Percy picket pistols poor Davis post 8vo prisoners rank reader recollect regiment replied Conolly Rochdale romance round shot SAM SLICK scenes sergeant Sir George sketches smile soon speedily spirit Stilton story thought tion Tom King vols volumes Walcheren walked young
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Side 228 - 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 318 - ... acquainted with the rich stores of intellectual wealth long garnered in the literature and beautiful romance of Northern Europe. From the famous Edda, whose origin is lost in antiquity, down to the novels of Miss Bremer and Baroness Knorring, the prose and poetic writings of Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and Iceland are here introduced to us in a manner at once singularly comprehensive and concise. It is no dry enumeration of names, but the very marrow and spirit of the various works displayed before...
Side 16 - ... stirring narratives of deeds of arms in all parts of the world. Every information of value and interest to both the Services is culled with the greatest diligence from every available source, and the correspondence of various distinguished officers which enrich its pages is a feature of great attraction. in short, the
Side 10 - SLICK." 3 vols. post 8vo. 31s. 6d. " No man has done more than the facetious Judge Haliburton, through the mouth of the inimitable 'Sam,' to make the old parent country recognize and appreciate her queer transatlantic progeny. His present collection of comic stories and laughable traits is a budget of fun full of rich specimens of American humour.
Side 317 - THE LIFE OF MARGUERITE D'ANGOULEME, QUEEN of NAVARRE, SISTER of FRANCIS I. From numerous original sources, including MS. Documents in the Bibliotheque Imperiale, and the Archives du Royaume de France, and the Private Correspondence of Queen Marguerite with Francis I, &c.
Side 7 - TRAVELS IN EUROPEAN TURKEY: THROUGH BOSNIA, SERVIA, BULGARIA, MACEDONIA, ROUMELIA, ALBANIA, AND EPIRUS ; WITH A VISIT TO GREECE AND THE IONIAN ISLES, and a HOMEWARD TOUR THROUGH HUNGARY AND THE ScLAVONIAN PROVINCES OF AUSTRIA ON THE LOWER DANUBE. By EDMUND SPENCER, Esa. Author of " Travels in Circassia,
Side 312 - This biography cannot fail to attract the deep attention of the public. We are bound to say, that as a political biography we have rarely, if ever, met with a book more dexterously handled, or more replete with interest. The history of the famous session of...
Side 16 - PRESS. •"This is confessedly one of the ablest and most attractive periodicals of which the British press can boast, presenting a wide field of entertainment to the general as well as professional reader.
Side 316 - A work of high literary and historical merit. Rarely have the strange vicissitudes of romance been more intimately blended with the facts of real history than in the life of Marie de Medicis; nor has the difficult problem of combining with the fidelity of biography the graphic power of dramatic delineation been often more successfully solved than by the talettted author of the volumes before us.
Side 1 - Both the journals and letters of Capt. Calvert are full of interest. The letters, in particular, are entitled to much praise. Not too long, easy, graceful, not without wit, and everywhere marked by good sense and good taste — the series addressed by Capt.