The lost ship; or, The Atlantic steamer, Volume 270 |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 100
Página 16
... Nautila , for by this singular but not unmusical name her father designated this untutored child of solitude . CHAPTER VI . " Day ne'er will break on mountain tops More heavenly fair than she ! She was so like a vision . " BYRON ...
... Nautila , for by this singular but not unmusical name her father designated this untutored child of solitude . CHAPTER VI . " Day ne'er will break on mountain tops More heavenly fair than she ! She was so like a vision . " BYRON ...
Página 18
... Nautila could scarcely believe to proceed from any other motive than extreme rage , while the facile features of our hero's countenance were moulded to maintain the deception , he called out to the father , while he made a most ...
... Nautila could scarcely believe to proceed from any other motive than extreme rage , while the facile features of our hero's countenance were moulded to maintain the deception , he called out to the father , while he made a most ...
Página 21
... Nautila , and let our visitor look on . " As the father said this , he walked out before the house , and , looking round him , as if for some object of aim , plucked presently from the road - side a large flower of the digitalis tribe ...
... Nautila , and let our visitor look on . " As the father said this , he walked out before the house , and , looking round him , as if for some object of aim , plucked presently from the road - side a large flower of the digitalis tribe ...
Página 25
... Nautila's eyes cast down upon the ground ; her eloquent features covered with an expression of the most painful confusion and distress , as if every additional sarcasm that passed her parent's lips found an effect less upon its victim's ...
... Nautila's eyes cast down upon the ground ; her eloquent features covered with an expression of the most painful confusion and distress , as if every additional sarcasm that passed her parent's lips found an effect less upon its victim's ...
Página 33
... sacred to the use of Nautila , who was clearly the goddess of the spot , and who , in our hero , had already gained a worshipper of no faint devotion . D At a little distance from this bathing - house was THE LOST SHIP . 33.
... sacred to the use of Nautila , who was clearly the goddess of the spot , and who , in our hero , had already gained a worshipper of no faint devotion . D At a little distance from this bathing - house was THE LOST SHIP . 33.
Outras edições - Ver tudo
The Lost Ship: Or, the Atlantic Steamer - Primary Source Edition William Johnstoun N. Neale Pré-visualização indisponível - 2013 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
answer appeared beheld beneath boat Boston Bill Bostonian brigadier brigadier's cabin called captain cardmaker carpet-bag Cerberus certainly CHAPTER command course cried danger daughter dear deck delight devil duenna Ebenezer Wire England exclaimed eyes father fcap fear feel followed forecastle friend Herbert gallant gaze give gold hand happiness head hear heard heart Heaven hero honour hope hour iceberg instant John lady look major marriage matter mind minutes mutineers Nautila neighbour Broadbrim never night old gentleman once paddle-wheels party passengers person portmanteau possess quaker quarter-deck replied returned rifle round sail saloon scarcely seemed seen ship shore side slightest soon sort Spanish Legion spot steamer sure Symonds tarnation tarpaulin tell thee thing thou thought turning utter voice watch word Wynn Powell young Zounds دو وو
Passagens conhecidas
Página 326 - I AM monarch of all I survey, My right there is none to dispute ; From the centre all round to the sea I am lord of the fowl and the brute.
Página 232 - Can such things be, And overcome us like a summer cloud, Without our special wonder...
Página 106 - Her home is on the deep. With thunders from her native oak She quells the floods below — As they roar on the shore, When the stormy winds do blow; When the battle rages loud and long, And the stormy winds do blow.
Página 397 - Mr. Motley's volumes will well repay perusal. * * * For his learning, his liberal tone, and his generous enthusiasm, we heartily commend him, and bid him good speed for the remainer of his interesting and heroic narrative.— Saturday Review.
Página 398 - Prescott's Works in point of style rank with the ablest English historians, and paragraphs may be found in which the grace and elegance of Addison are combined with Robertson's cadence and Gibson's brilliancy.
Página 398 - England." Its style is lofty and eloquent, written with candour, neither exaggerating vices of character, nor reviving national animosities, but rendering a just tribute to virtue, wherever found.
Página 397 - We have thus supplied what has long been wanting to every student of English literature — a thoroughly trustworthy handbook, in which the chief events of modern history are set forth in a clear, concise, and intelligent form.