The Dog Fiend; Or, Snarleyyow, Volumen183G. Routledge, 1856 - 309 páginas |
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Resultados 1-5 de 57
Página 11
... wish you would - irons don't bite , if they hold fast . I'll run away - I don't mind being hung - that I don't- starved to death , bitten to death in this here way- 66 " " Silence , sir . It's over - feeding that makes you saucy ...
... wish you would - irons don't bite , if they hold fast . I'll run away - I don't mind being hung - that I don't- starved to death , bitten to death in this here way- 66 " " Silence , sir . It's over - feeding that makes you saucy ...
Página 32
... wishes to know why she did so now we will ac- quaint him ; the widow Vandersloosh had perceived Small- bones , who sat like Patience on a monument , upon the two half bags of biscuit before her porch . It was a query to the widow ...
... wishes to know why she did so now we will ac- quaint him ; the widow Vandersloosh had perceived Small- bones , who sat like Patience on a monument , upon the two half bags of biscuit before her porch . It was a query to the widow ...
Página 38
... wish that it was more . It can't be help'd , says Susan then , you know we've spent galore . You know we've spent galore , my Bill , And merry have been we , Again you must your pockets fill , For Susan on your knee . Chorus , my boys ...
... wish that it was more . It can't be help'd , says Susan then , you know we've spent galore . You know we've spent galore , my Bill , And merry have been we , Again you must your pockets fill , For Susan on your knee . Chorus , my boys ...
Página 42
... wish to be . Odds bobs , hammer and tongs , long as I've been to sea , I've fought ' gainst every odds - and I've gain'd the victory . Our captain sent for all of us ; my merry men , said he , I havn't the gift of the gab , my lads ...
... wish to be . Odds bobs , hammer and tongs , long as I've been to sea , I've fought ' gainst every odds - and I've gain'd the victory . Our captain sent for all of us ; my merry men , said he , I havn't the gift of the gab , my lads ...
Página 47
... wishes ; at last , he commenced by dragging one rope's - end from one side and another from the other ; those would do for the side ropes , but he wanted a long one from forward and another from aft , and how to get the one from aft ...
... wishes ; at last , he commenced by dragging one rope's - end from one side and another from the other ; those would do for the side ropes , but he wanted a long one from forward and another from aft , and how to get the one from aft ...
Contenido
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Términos y frases comunes
appeared arms arrived Babette Bill Spurey boat cabin cave Cherbourg Cornbury Corporal Van Spitter corporal's crew cried Vanslyperken cutter dear despatches devil Dick Short door exclaimed Vanslyperken eyes Fiddler's Green forecastle Frau Vandersloosh gold Gott gunwale hand head heard Jacobite Jansen Jemmy Ducks keel-hauling King William knocked leave letters lieutenant Lilly looked Lord Lord Albemarle Lust Haus majesty marines master Mein Gott mind Mistress Moggy morning mother Mynheer Krause Mynheer Vanslyperken Nancy Corbett never night observed old woman party perceived perken poral Port Admiral Portsmouth pulled Ramsay received replied Jemmy replied Short replied Smallbones replied the corporal replied Vanslyperken Robert Barclay round sail ship's company Sir Robert slyperken smugglers Snarley Snarleyyow soon syndic taffrail tail tell thought took traitor turned tyfel Vansly vessel waited walked widow Vandersloosh Wilhelmina wish Yungfrau
Pasajes populares
Página 306 - Homer is not more decidedly the first of heroic poets, Shakspeare is not more decidedly the first of dramatists, Demosthenes is not more decidedly the first of orators, than Boswell is the first of biographers. He has no second. He has distanced all his competitors so decidedly that it is not worth while to place them. Eclipse is first, and the rest nowhere.
Página 188 - Tweed ; and, that no papist should be capable of purchasing any lands, tenements, or hereditaments, either in his own name or in the name of any other person in trust for him.
Página 42 - gainst every odds —and I've gain'd the victory. Our captain sent for all of us; my merry men, said he, I haven't the gift of the gab, my lads, but yet I thankful be: You've done your duty handsomely, each man stood to his gun; If you hadn't, you villains, as sure as day, I'd have flogg'd each mother's son. Odds bobs, hammer and tongs, as long as I'm at sea, I'll fight 'gainst every odds —and I'll gain the victory.
Página 7 - His long lanky legs were pulled so far through his trousers, that his bare feet, and half way up to his knees, were exposed to the chilling blast. The sleeves of his jacket were so short, that four inches of bone above his wrist were bared to view ; hat he had none ; his ears were very large, and the rims of them red with cold, and his neck was so immeasurably long and thin, that his head appeared to topple for want of support. When he had come on deck, he stood with one hand raised to his forehead,...
Página 305 - Gerstaecker's books abound in adventure and scenes of excitement; and are fully equal, in that respect, to the stories either of Marryat, Cooper, or Dana.