Redgauntlet: A Tale of the Eighteenth Century, Bind 2Archibald Constable and Company Edinburgh, 1824 - 331 sider |
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Side 34
... Quaker Geddes , one of the principal partners of the Tide - net Fishing Company , and done a great deal of damage . Am sorry to add , young Mr Latimer was in the fray , and has not since been heard of . Murder is spoke of , but that may ...
... Quaker Geddes , one of the principal partners of the Tide - net Fishing Company , and done a great deal of damage . Am sorry to add , young Mr Latimer was in the fray , and has not since been heard of . Murder is spoke of , but that may ...
Side 57
... Quaker family well known in the neighbour- hood , and with whom I had contracted habits of intimacy , would possibly be offended if I did not make them an early visit . Both , he said , had been particularly inquiring the reasons of my ...
... Quaker family well known in the neighbour- hood , and with whom I had contracted habits of intimacy , would possibly be offended if I did not make them an early visit . Both , he said , had been particularly inquiring the reasons of my ...
Side 75
... Quaker's wife , And merrily danced the Quaker . " Even at that moment of alarm , I think I re- cognized the tones of the blind fiddler , Will , known by the name of Wandering Willie , from his itinerant habits . They continued to ...
... Quaker's wife , And merrily danced the Quaker . " Even at that moment of alarm , I think I re- cognized the tones of the blind fiddler , Will , known by the name of Wandering Willie , from his itinerant habits . They continued to ...
Side 76
... Quaker - whoop , Quaker -here have we them both , the wet Quaker and the dry one . " " Hang up the wet Quaker to dry , and wet the dry one with a ducking , " answered another voice . " Where is the sea - otter , John Davies , that ...
... Quaker - whoop , Quaker -here have we them both , the wet Quaker and the dry one . " " Hang up the wet Quaker to dry , and wet the dry one with a ducking , " answered another voice . " Where is the sea - otter , John Davies , that ...
Side 93
... know nothing how to use it like a gentleman , but spend your time with Quakers and fiddlers , and such like raff ? If I was your - hem , hem , hem . " Here Cristal stopped short , just on the point , JOURNAL . CHAP . IV . 93.
... know nothing how to use it like a gentleman , but spend your time with Quakers and fiddlers , and such like raff ? If I was your - hem , hem , hem . " Here Cristal stopped short , just on the point , JOURNAL . CHAP . IV . 93.
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
acquainted addressed Alan Fairford Alan's answered appeared auld Baliol betwixt Birrenswork called cause clerk cobite Court Cristal Nixon danger Darsie Latimer door Dorcas doubt Drudgeit Dumfries Edinburgh Edward Baliol endeavoured escape father favourable folks follow ford Geddes hand heard Herries hinnie honest honour hope horse Jacobites James Wilkinson John Davies Justice Foxley Justice of Peace lady Laird length letter loike look magistrate matter maun Maxwell means ment mind Mount Sharon mutchkin Nanty Ewart never occasion ower party Pate-in-Peril person Poor Peter Peebles present Provost Crosbie purpose Quaker recollection Redgauntlet replied Saint Bees Sallust Saunders Fairford Scotland seemed Shepherd's Bush shew singular Solway Summertrees thee thing thou thought tion tone trepanned Trumbull trust unhappy voice vost warrant weel Whigs wish words young lawyer
Populære passager
Side 203 - MY heart's in the Highlands, my heart is not here : My heart's in the Highlands a-chasing the deer ; Chasing the wild deer, and following the roe, My heart's in the Highlands wherever I go. Farewell to the Highlands, farewell to the North, The birth-place of valour, the country of worth ; Wherever I wander, wherever I rove, The hills of the Highlands for ever I love.
Side 160 - God bless the King !— God bless the Faith's defender !— God bless — No harm in blessing the Pretender. Who that Pretender is, and who that King,*— God bless us all, — is quite another thing.
Side 3 - ... practised by various great authors, and by ourselves in the preceding chapters. Nevertheless, a genuine correspondence of this kind (and Heaven forbid it should be in any respect sophisticated by interpolations of our own !) can seldom be found to contain all in which it is necessary to instruct the reader for his full comprehension of the story.
Side 7 - ... frequently, as his little cellar contained some choice old wine, of which, on such rare occasions, he was no niggard. The whole pleasure of this good old-fashioned man of method, besides that which he really felt in the discharge of his...
Side 203 - ... HEART'S IN THE HIGHLANDS. MY heart's in the Highlands, my heart is not here ; My heart's in the Highlands a-chasing the deer ; Chasing the wild deer, and following the roe, My heart's in the Highlands wherever I go.
Side 85 - I answered, with an energy of which despair alone could have rendered me capable — " I will never submit to loss of freedom a moment longer than I am subjected to it by force.
Side 240 - I swear and vow by moon and stars, And sun that shines so early, If I had twenty thousand lives, I'd die as aft for Charlie.
Side 326 - And every one that was in distress, and every one that was in debt, and every one that was discontented, gathered themselves unto him; and he became a captain over them: and there were with him about four hundred men.