Richard Hurdis: A Tale of Alabama |
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Page 15
... told . The freed youth at twenty - one , for the first time freed , and im- patient only for the exercise of his freedom , has but few pur- poses , and his plans are usually single and unsophisticated enough . Remember , I am speaking ...
... told . The freed youth at twenty - one , for the first time freed , and im- patient only for the exercise of his freedom , has but few pur- poses , and his plans are usually single and unsophisticated enough . Remember , I am speaking ...
Page 18
... told me I should not be where I had set my heart ; and that the boon has been given to another , for which I had struggled long , and for a long season had hoped to attain . Can you wonder that I should seek to go abroad , even were I ...
... told me I should not be where I had set my heart ; and that the boon has been given to another , for which I had struggled long , and for a long season had hoped to attain . Can you wonder that I should seek to go abroad , even were I ...
Page 22
... told him to his teeth he was a scoundrel ; and he bore with the imputation , and spoke of our blood connection as the reason for his forbearance to resent an indignity which , agreeably to our modes of thinking , could only be atoned ...
... told him to his teeth he was a scoundrel ; and he bore with the imputation , and spoke of our blood connection as the reason for his forbearance to resent an indignity which , agreeably to our modes of thinking , could only be atoned ...
Page 24
... told you not this along with the rest of my misdoings which he has been careful to re- late to you . Perhaps , he might have done so , had the story spoken more favorably for his manhood . " We had been sitting together by the window ...
... told you not this along with the rest of my misdoings which he has been careful to re- late to you . Perhaps , he might have done so , had the story spoken more favorably for his manhood . " We had been sitting together by the window ...
Page 25
... told you , Mary , that I have no cause of com- plaint that I hold it unmanly to complain ? And wherefore should I complain of you ? —I have no right . You are mistress of your own words and actions so far as Richard Hurdis is con ...
... told you , Mary , that I have no cause of com- plaint that I hold it unmanly to complain ? And wherefore should I complain of you ? —I have no right . You are mistress of your own words and actions so far as Richard Hurdis is con ...
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Common terms and phrases
Alabama answer beheld Ben Pickett better blood bosom brother Choctaws Clifton Colonel Grafton companion confidence dastard desire doubt Eberly emissary Emmeline enemy escape exclaimed eyes father fear feel fellow felt forget fortunate Foster gamblers Georgian girl give Haller hand hate hear heard heart hope horse instant Jane John Hurdis Julia keep knew laugh leave less lips look Marengo Mary Easterby matter mind mother murderer nature never night once paused perhaps person Pickett pistol poor prompt ready reply resolution resolved Richard Hurdis road secret seemed seen shot sight Sipsy sleep smile soon sorrow sort soul speak spect speech spirit spoke squire stranger striker sudden suffer sure talk Tar river tell there's thought tion to-morrow told trembled truth turned Tuscaloosa uttered voice watch Webber whipping-post William Carrington woods words wrong
Popular passages
Page 162 - How like a fawning publican he looks! I hate him for he is a Christian : But more, for that, in low simplicity, He lends out money gratis, and brings down The rate of usance here with us in Venice. If I can catch him once upon the hip, I will feed fat the ancient grudge I bear him.
Page 102 - She dwelt among the untrodden ways Beside the springs of Dove, A Maid whom there were none to praise And very few to love : A violet by a mossy stone Half hidden from the eye! Fair as a star, when only one Is shining in the sky.
Page 350 - He's a bad surgeon that for pity spares The part corrupted till the gangrene spread, And all the body perish. He that's merciful Unto the bad is cruel to the good.
Page 156 - O'er all his heart shall Taste and Beauty sway ! Free on the sunny slope, or winding shore, With hermit steps to wander and adore!
Page 11 - Hurdis] during my early wanderings in that then wild country. The crimes here recorded were then actually in progress of commission; and some of my scenes and several of my persons, were sketched from the best local authorities.
Page 248 - Dare not adventure on the stubborne pray, Ne byte before, but rome from place to place To get a snatch when turned is his face.
Page 120 - ... the six mounted men; and, in spite of the strenuous efforts to shake him off, stuck on like the old man of the sea on the shoulders of Sinbad the sailor. Of those who seemed likely to succeed a majority wore only shirt and trowsers; though some of these had a scarlet band tied round the right wrist, for what purpose we cannot say. It also appears that the commissioners opened two sets of books, one for themselves and one for the public.
Page 369 - To what gulfs A single deviation from the track Of human duties leads even those who claim The homage of mankind as their born due, And find it, till they forfeit it themselves ! Enter MYRRHA.
Page 6 - Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1853, BY JS REDFIELD, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States, in and for the Southern District of New York.
Page 65 - That glowed in generous blood, and had no care, And little thought of the future — followed him; — Some perch'd on gallant steeds, others, more slow, The infants and the matrons of the flock, In coach and jersey, — but all moving on To the new land of promise, full of dreams Of western riches, Mississippi-mad ! Then came the hands, some forty-five or more, Their moderate wealth...