Will Weatherhelm, Volume 109 |
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Page 13
... hold him in a good deal of respect and awe , an honour my friend did not pay to many people . This I found was owing much to the liberal allowance of rope - end which the mate dealt out to his son whenever he neglected his duty . or did ...
... hold him in a good deal of respect and awe , an honour my friend did not pay to many people . This I found was owing much to the liberal allowance of rope - end which the mate dealt out to his son whenever he neglected his duty . or did ...
Page 21
... hold with teeth and eyelids , as the saying is , and very little use I suspect I was of . Still the sails , or rather what remained of them , were furled , and I had been aloft in a gale . I very soon learned to think nothing of it . We ...
... hold with teeth and eyelids , as the saying is , and very little use I suspect I was of . Still the sails , or rather what remained of them , were furled , and I had been aloft in a gale . I very soon learned to think nothing of it . We ...
Page 28
... hold of a pistol apiece , and purposed committing great execution with them , but I was con- demned to help La Motte to hand up powder and shot from below , greatly to Master Charley's amusement , who looked down and asked how I liked ...
... hold of a pistol apiece , and purposed committing great execution with them , but I was con- demned to help La Motte to hand up powder and shot from below , greatly to Master Charley's amusement , who looked down and asked how I liked ...
Page 30
... hold us struggling and writhing in his grasp . We had fought as long as we could ; but what could we do against such overwhelming numbers ? We did not strike to the villains at all events , for we had not a man by this time left on his ...
... hold us struggling and writhing in his grasp . We had fought as long as we could ; but what could we do against such overwhelming numbers ? We did not strike to the villains at all events , for we had not a man by this time left on his ...
Page 32
... directions I bound up his wounds as well as I could , and in a little time he began to crawl about , though it seemed to give him great pain to do so . On THE SINKING SHIP . 33 looking into the hold we 32 WILL WEATHERHELM .
... directions I bound up his wounds as well as I could , and in a little time he began to crawl about , though it seemed to give him great pain to do so . On THE SINKING SHIP . 33 looking into the hold we 32 WILL WEATHERHELM .
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Common terms and phrases
aloft answered asked Aunt Bretta began boat brig canvas captain Charley Iffley cloth coloured companions course crew dark deck Edition enemy English escape exclaimed eyes fancy Fcap fellow felt French Frenchmen frigate gale gilt edges gone grandmother and aunt Guernsey guns hands happy harbour HARRISON WEIR hauled head heard heart hope hove Illustrations islands keep knew knocked La Motte lads land looked lugger man-of-war masts Merton midshipman Miss Rundle Montezuma Motte Mount's Bay Nautile never night oars officers old lady old mate once overboard passed pirates Plymouth poor port pulled raft Randolph rock round round shot sail scarcely schooner seaman Shetland ship shipmates shore shot shouted side sight soon story tell things thought told took vessel voice watch weather Weatherhelm wife Willand wind wish wreck young
Popular passages
Page 218 - Dearly beloved, avenge not yourselves, but rather give place unto wrath : for it is written, Vengeance is mine ; I will repay, saith the Lord. Therefore, if thine enemy hunger, feed him ; if he thirst, give him drink : for in so doing thou shalt heap coals of fire on his head. Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good.
Page 16 - LADY STODDART. 2. Mrs. Leicester's School. BY CHARLES and MARY LAMB. 3. The History of The Robins. BY MRS. TRIMMER. 4. Memoir of Bob, The Spotted Terrier. 5. Keeper's Travels in Search of His Master. 6. The Scottish Orphans. BY LADY STODDART. 7. Never Wrong; or, the Young Disputant; AND "It was only in Fun." 8. The Life and Perambulations of a Mouse. 9. Easy Introduction to the Knowledge of Nature. BY MBS. TRIMMER. 10. Bight and Wrong. BY the Author of "ALWAYS HAPPY.
Page 27 - Mamma's Lessons. For her Little Boys and Girls. Thirteenth Edition, with eight Engravings. Price 2s. 6rf. cloth; 3s. 6d. coloured, gilt edges. The Mine; Or, Subterranean Wonders. An Account of the Operations of the Miner and the Products of his Labours; with a Description of the most important in all parts of the World.
Page 11 - Wanderers ; Or, the Adventures of Carlos and Antonio; embracing interesting Descriptions of the Manners and Customs of the Western Tribes, and the Natural Productions of the Country.
Page 23 - True Stories from Ancient History, , . . , . Chronologically arranged from the Creation of the World to the Death : of Charlemagne.
Page 15 - Every-Day Things ; or, Useful Knowledge respecting the Principal Animal, Vegetable, and Mineral Substances in Common Use. Second Edition, revised. 18mo., cloth, Is. 6d. " A little encyclopaedia of useful knowledge, deserving a place in every juvenile library.
Page 282 - While extremists may find some fault with the moderation of our platform, they should recollect that " the battle is not always to the strong, nor the race to the swift.
Page 301 - There is many a slip between the cup and the lip, and before the spring much may be changed.
Page 24 - Gaultier's Familiar Geography. With a concise Treatise on the Artificial Sphere, and two coloured Maps, illustrative of the principal Geographical Terms. Sixteenth Edition. 16mo, 3s. cloth. Butler's Outline Maps, and Key, or GEOGRAPHICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL EXERCISES ; with a Set of Coloured Outline Maps, designed for the use of Young Persons. By the late WILLIAM BUTLER. Enlarged by the Author's Son, J.
Page 22 - Bible Scenes ; Or, Sunday Employment for very young Children. Consisting of Twelve Coloured Illustrations on Cards, and the History written in Simple Language. In a neat box, 3s.