The Red Rover: A Tale |
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Page 5
... speak like honest men : pray God ye prove so . " REVISED , CORRECTED , ANI ILLUSTRATED WITH A NEW INTRODUCTION , NOTES , ETC. BY THE AUTHOR . NEW YORK : GEORGE P. PUTNAM , 155 BROADWAY . 1852 . Harvard Collete Library p15 , 1918 . Gift ...
... speak like honest men : pray God ye prove so . " REVISED , CORRECTED , ANI ILLUSTRATED WITH A NEW INTRODUCTION , NOTES , ETC. BY THE AUTHOR . NEW YORK : GEORGE P. PUTNAM , 155 BROADWAY . 1852 . Harvard Collete Library p15 , 1918 . Gift ...
Page 40
... speak like a man who at least feels that he has a right to give an opinion . " " Do you find it remarkable that one should not be ignorant of a profession that he has diligently pursued for a whole life ? ” " Hum ! I find it a little ...
... speak like a man who at least feels that he has a right to give an opinion . " " Do you find it remarkable that one should not be ignorant of a profession that he has diligently pursued for a whole life ? ” " Hum ! I find it a little ...
Page 43
... Speak freely , " interrupted the stranger in green , with an air of princely condescension ; though one , less simple and less occupied with his own budding honours than the tailor , might have easily discovered that he began to grow ...
... Speak freely , " interrupted the stranger in green , with an air of princely condescension ; though one , less simple and less occupied with his own budding honours than the tailor , might have easily discovered that he began to grow ...
Page 52
... speaking when properly spoken to— so , ' why , sir , ' says I , ' saving your honour's better judgment , ' -which was all a flam , for he was but a chicken to me in years and experience ; but then I never throw hot ashes to windward ...
... speaking when properly spoken to— so , ' why , sir , ' says I , ' saving your honour's better judgment , ' -which was all a flam , for he was but a chicken to me in years and experience ; but then I never throw hot ashes to windward ...
Page 54
... speak , in order that the truth of this matter may not be hid like a marlingspike jammed between a brace - block and a yard . " " Here , then , is the man , " returned Fid ; and , stretching out his arm , he seized Scipio by the collar ...
... speak , in order that the truth of this matter may not be hid like a marlingspike jammed between a brace - block and a yard . " " Here , then , is the man , " returned Fid ; and , stretching out his arm , he seized Scipio by the collar ...
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Common terms and phrases
adventurer answered appeared believe Bignall boat boatswain Bob Bunt bows breeze cabin calm canvass captain cast character commander companion continued countenance crew cruiser danger deck demanded Dolphin ears exclaimed favour feel flag followed gaze Gertrude give glance governess Guinea guns hand head heard Heaven honest honour hope hour humour instant interrupted Joram knew Knighthead Lacey lady land light sails look madam manner mariner Master Harry masts mate matter mind minute Mister Robert never Newport night ocean officer passed pinnace province of Carolina quarter-deck racter Red Rover reply returned rigging Roderick Rover Royal Caroline sail seaman seemed seen ship skiff slaver smile sound spars speak stood stranger taffrail tailor thing thought topman turned vessel voice voice of Wilder Wilder wind words Wyllys yard yonder young youth
Popular passages
Page 429 - Out of my grief and my impatience, Answer'd neglectingly I know not what, He should, or he should not; for he made me mad, To see him shine so brisk and smell so sweet...
Page 234 - ... 46," continued the other, " and saw a vessel lying, as it might be, here on our weatherbow — which is just opposite to this fellow, since he is on our lee-quarter — but there I saw a ship standing for an hour across our fore-foot, and yet, though we set the azimuth, not a degree did he budge, starboard or larboard, during all that time, which, as it was heavy weather, was, to say the least, something out of the common order.
Page 261 - At this appalling moment, a candle would have sent its flame perpendicularly towards the heavens. The ship, missing the steadying power of the wind, rolled heavily in the troughs of the seas, which began to lessen at each instant, as if the startled element was recalling into the security of its own vast bosom that portion of its particles which had so lately been permitted to gambol madly over its surface. The water washed sullenly along the side of the ship, or, as she...
Page 265 - ... Earing by the arm, as the latter rushed madly up the steep of the deck ; ' it is our duty to be calm : bring hither an axe.' " Quick as the thought which gave the order, the admonished mate complied, jumping into the miz'zen^channels of the ship, to execute, with his own hands, the mandate that he well knew must follow.
Page 267 - What would you do, Captain Wilder?" interrupted the mate, laying his hand on the shoulder of his commander, who had already thrown his sea-cap on the deck, and was preparing to divest himself of some of his outer garments. " I go aloft to ease the mast of that topsail, without which we lose the spar, and possibly the ship.