Historical romances of the author of Waverley, Volume 3 |
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Page 57
... Sir Piercie Shafton , a friend of his and of his master , come to spend three or four days with little din in the tower . The good dame could not conceive how she was entitled to such an honour , and would fain have pleaded her want of ...
... Sir Piercie Shafton , a friend of his and of his master , come to spend three or four days with little din in the tower . The good dame could not conceive how she was entitled to such an honour , and would fain have pleaded her want of ...
Page 58
sir Walter Scott (bart [novels, collected]). have pleaded her want of every sort of convenience to entertain a guest of that quality . But , indeed , the visitor , when he cast his eyes ... Sir Piercie Shafton to 58 THE MONASTERY .
sir Walter Scott (bart [novels, collected]). have pleaded her want of every sort of convenience to entertain a guest of that quality . But , indeed , the visitor , when he cast his eyes ... Sir Piercie Shafton to 58 THE MONASTERY .
Page 59
sir Walter Scott (bart [novels, collected]). While he thus laboured to reconcile Sir Piercie Shafton to his fate , the widow having consulted her son Edward on the real import of the Lord Abbot's injunction , and having found that Chris ...
sir Walter Scott (bart [novels, collected]). While he thus laboured to reconcile Sir Piercie Shafton to his fate , the widow having consulted her son Edward on the real import of the Lord Abbot's injunction , and having found that Chris ...
Page 60
... Sir Piercie Shafton to pick his teeth or to yawn , or to gabble like the beggar whose tongue ( as he says ) was cut out by the Turks , or to affect deafness or blindness , or any other infirmity of the organs . But though the em ...
... Sir Piercie Shafton to pick his teeth or to yawn , or to gabble like the beggar whose tongue ( as he says ) was cut out by the Turks , or to affect deafness or blindness , or any other infirmity of the organs . But though the em ...
Page 64
sir Walter Scott (bart [novels, collected]). as little remorse as he would have driven the point of his lance through a laced doublet . Sir Piercie Shafton , a man of rank and high birth , by no means encouraged or endured this fa ...
sir Walter Scott (bart [novels, collected]). as little remorse as he would have driven the point of his lance through a laced doublet . Sir Piercie Shafton , a man of rank and high birth , by no means encouraged or endured this fa ...
Common terms and phrases
arms aught Baron betwixt blood brother called castle Christie church Clinthill companion countenance Dame Elspeth Dame Glendinning dare Earl Earl of Murray Edward Glendinning English knight Euphuist eyes fair faith fate Father Eustace fear feeling female gallant glen Glendearg guest Halbert Glendinning Halidome hand hath head heart Heaven Henry Warden holy honour horse Julian Avenel Kennaquhair looked Lord Abbot maiden Mary Avenel matter ment Miller Miller's daughter mind Molinara Monastery Monk Morton moss-trooper Murray Mysie Happer never noble pause person pray preacher present Refectioner replied reverence reverend Sacristan Saint Mary's Scotland seemed shalt shew Sir John Foster Sir Knight Sir Piercie Shafton sorrow Southron speak spirit stood stranger Sub-Prior sword tell thee ther thine thirlage thou art thou hast thought Tibb tion tone tower turn vassals venison voice White Lady wilt word young Glendinning youth
Popular passages
Page 242 - When lovely woman stoops to folly, And finds too late that men betray, What charm can soothe her melancholy, What art can wash her guilt away ? The only art her guilt to cover, To hide her shame from every eye, To give repentance to her lover, And wring his bosom — is to die.
Page 352 - Call upon me in the day of trouble, and I will deliver thee, and thou shalt glorify me.
Page 13 - Within that awful volume lies The mystery of mysteries ! Happiest they of human race, To whom God has granted grace To read, to fear, to hope, to pray, To lift the latch, and force the way ; And better had they ne'er been born, Who read to doubt, or read to scorn.
Page 57 - ... and inevitably-necessary-to-be-remembered manual of all that is worthy to be known — which indoctrines the rude in civility, the dull in intellectuality, the heavy in jocosity, the blunt in gentility, the vulgar in nobility, and all of them in that unutterable perfection of human utterance, that eloquence which no other eloquence is sufficient to praise, that art which, when we call it by its own name of Euphuism, we bestow on it its richest panegyric.
Page 53 - Euphues and his England, was in the very zenith of his absurdity and reputation. The quaint, forced, and unnatural style which he introduced by his Anatomy of Wit...
Page 330 - Shafton when he looked elsewhere, and were dropped at once when they encountered his, that she was irresistible ! In fine, the affectionate delicacy of her whole demeanour, joined to the promptitude and boldness she had so lately evinced, tended to ennoble the services she had rendered, as if some sweet engaging Grace Put on some clothes to come abroad, And took a waiter's place.
Page 386 - ... he never would take money for them, and that I should have the whole advantage of all he wrote. This declaration became morally void when the question was about thousands, instead of a few hundreds ; and I perfectly agree with the admired and admirable Author of Waverley, that « the wise and good accept not gifts which are made in heat of blood, and which may be after repented of.
Page 299 - should be removed to hallowed ground, and his soul secured by the prayers of the Church in his behalf." Grief would have its natural course, and the voice of the comforter was wasted in vain.