Romance: A NovelDoubleday, Page & Company, 1903 - 541 pages |
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Page 10
... tell me , " I said . " You're going to marry Veronica . Well , you've no need of my blessing . Some people have all the luck . Here am I . look at me ! " Ralph walked with his head bent down . " Confound it , " I said , " I shall run ...
... tell me , " I said . " You're going to marry Veronica . Well , you've no need of my blessing . Some people have all the luck . Here am I . look at me ! " Ralph walked with his head bent down . " Confound it , " I said , " I shall run ...
Page 24
... tell Veronica why I'm going , but keep a shut mouth to my mother . Let her think I've run away - eh ? Don't spoil your chance . " He was in such a state of repentance and flutter that he could not let me take a decent farewell . The ...
... tell Veronica why I'm going , but keep a shut mouth to my mother . Let her think I've run away - eh ? Don't spoil your chance . " He was in such a state of repentance and flutter that he could not let me take a decent farewell . The ...
Page 34
... telling me about his former life and his adventures . The other passengers he dis- countenanced by a certain coldness of manner that made me ashamed of talking to them . I respected him so ; he was so wonderful to me then . Castro I ...
... telling me about his former life and his adventures . The other passengers he dis- countenanced by a certain coldness of manner that made me ashamed of talking to them . I respected him so ; he was so wonderful to me then . Castro I ...
Page 36
... tell . " What can she be to me since I have seen your ? " he said once , and then stopped , looking at me with a certain tender irony . He insisted , though , that his aged uncle was in need of him . As for Castro - he and his rags came ...
... tell . " What can she be to me since I have seen your ? " he said once , and then stopped , looking at me with a certain tender irony . He insisted , though , that his aged uncle was in need of him . As for Castro - he and his rags came ...
Page 38
... Tell me , O my Tomas , would it be safe to take this caballero , my cousin , to Rio Medio ? " Castro paused , and then murmured gruffly : " Señor , unless that Irishman is consulted beforehand , or the English lord would undertake to ...
... Tell me , O my Tomas , would it be safe to take this caballero , my cousin , to Rio Medio ? " Castro paused , and then murmured gruffly : " Señor , unless that Irishman is consulted beforehand , or the English lord would undertake to ...
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Common terms and phrases
admiral Alguazil answered asked began boat Bow Street runners bowed breath caballero called Carlos Casa Riego cloak cried Cuba dark dead death deck Don Balthasar Don Carlos door ears El Rubio English eyes face Father Antonio fear feet felt glance gone hair hand hang Havana head heard heart honour immense Inglez Jamaica John Kemp Juan Juez Kemp Kingston knew lanthorn laughed light Lion lips looked Lord Stowell Lugareños Macdonald Manuel matter murder murmured never Nichols night O'Brien once pirates Ramon Rangsley ravine Rio Medio romance Rooksby round sail saturnine schooner Sebright seemed seen Señor Señorita Seraphina shadow ship shoulders shouted side sight silence smile sort soul sound Spanish stood suddenly talk tell thing thought throat Tomas Castro turned uncle voice walked wall whispered Williams woman words
Popular passages
Page 157 - Carlos' room, with many cigarettes stuck behind his ears and in the band of his hat. When these were gone he grubbed for more in the depths of his clothing, somewhere near his skin. Puffs of smoke issued from his pursed lips; and the desolation of his pose, the sorrow of his round, wrinkled face, was so great that it seemed were he to cease smoking, he would die of grief. The general effect of the place was of vitality exhausted, of a body calcined, of romance turned into stone. The still air, the...
Page 51 - I was tired ; Romance had departed. Barnes and the Macdonald he had found for me represented all the laborious insects of the world ; all the ants who are for ever hauling immensely heavy and immensely unimportant burdens up weary hillocks, down steep places, getting nowhere and doing nothing.
Page 153 - ... lonely echoes, and strips of grass outlined in parallelograms the flagstones of the roadway. The Casa Riego raised its buttressed and loop-holed bulk near the shore, resembling a defensive outwork; on my other hand the shallow bay, vast, placid, and shining, extended itself behind the strip of coast like an enormous lagoon. The fronds of palmclusters dotted the beach over the glassy shimmer of the far distance. The dark and wooded slopes of the hills closed the view inland on every side.
Page 532 - If there were to be any possibility of saving my life, I had to tell what I had been through — and to tell it vividly — I had to narrate the story of my life; and my whole life came into my mind.