Waverley, Or 'Tis Sixty Years SinceD. Appelton and Company, 1875 - 204 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 87
Página 4
... observed less or more in every work in which the third person is used , from the Commentaries of Cæsar , to the Autobiography of Alexander the Corrector . I must refer to a very early period of my life , were I to point out my first ...
... observed less or more in every work in which the third person is used , from the Commentaries of Cæsar , to the Autobiography of Alexander the Corrector . I must refer to a very early period of my life , were I to point out my first ...
Página 8
... observed , I can only resort to the ex- planation supplied by a critic as friendly as he is intelligent ; namely , that the mental organization of the Novelist must be characterized , to speak eraniologically , by an extraordinary ...
... observed , I can only resort to the ex- planation supplied by a critic as friendly as he is intelligent ; namely , that the mental organization of the Novelist must be characterized , to speak eraniologically , by an extraordinary ...
Página 10
... observed that trust , until the derangement of the affairs of my publishers , Messrs . Constable and Co. , and the exposure of their accompt - books , which was the necessary consequence , rendered secrecy no longer possible , The ...
... observed that trust , until the derangement of the affairs of my publishers , Messrs . Constable and Co. , and the exposure of their accompt - books , which was the necessary consequence , rendered secrecy no longer possible , The ...
Página 14
... observation which ranked him with the false prophets of Dunbar , for he ad- dressed Mr. Maxwell upon the first ... observed , that the Northern English retain rather more of the ancient heredi- tary aversion to their neighbors than ...
... observation which ranked him with the false prophets of Dunbar , for he ad- dressed Mr. Maxwell upon the first ... observed , that the Northern English retain rather more of the ancient heredi- tary aversion to their neighbors than ...
Página 16
... observed the traces of a large stag on the preceding even- ing , were able , without loss of time , to conduct the company , by the marks which they had made upon the trees , to the side of the thicket , in which , by the report of ...
... observed the traces of a large stag on the preceding even- ing , were able , without loss of time , to conduct the company , by the marks which they had made upon the trees , to the side of the thicket , in which , by the report of ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todo
Términos y frases comunes
answered appearance arms attend auld Bailie better Bradwardine Brown called Callum Captain castle CHAPTER character Charles Hazlewood Chieftain clan Colonel Mannering Colonel Talbot command Cumnor daugh dear deyvil Dinmont Dominie door Earl Edinburgh Edward Ellangowan eyes father favor fear feelings Fergus Flora followed frae gentleman gipsy give Glennaquoich Glossin guest Guy Mannering hand hath Hatteraick Hazlewood head heard heart Highland honor hope horse Jacobite Julia lady Laird Lambourne Liddesdale look Lord Mac-Ivor Mac-Morlan Master maun ment mind Miss Bertram Miss Mannering morning never night observed occasion party person Pleydell poor portmanteau Prince prisoner recollection rendered replied Rose Sampson Scotland seemed Sir Everard stranger sword tell thee thou thought tion Tressilian Tully-Veolan turned Varney Vich Ian Waverley Waverley's Wayland Wayland Smith weel wish Woodbourne words young