The Spy: A Tale of the Neutral GroundHoughton Mifflin, 1911 - 434 էջ |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 68–ի 1-ից 5-ը:
Էջ iii
... knew when he should suddenly be- come the teacher of his classmates . - A few of the questions which are printed at the back of the book were suggested by the pupils , though it is but fair to say that most of them were written out as a ...
... knew when he should suddenly be- come the teacher of his classmates . - A few of the questions which are printed at the back of the book were suggested by the pupils , though it is but fair to say that most of them were written out as a ...
Էջ vii
... knew little ; he had been in London on brief on - shore visits , but of society there he had almost no first - hand knowledge . But as Professor Lounsbury points out , Cooper was writing at a time when the literary dependence of America ...
... knew little ; he had been in London on brief on - shore visits , but of society there he had almost no first - hand knowledge . But as Professor Lounsbury points out , Cooper was writing at a time when the literary dependence of America ...
Էջ viii
... knew that a book written by an Englishman was more likely to win fame even in America , he published Precaution under the pretence that its author was an Englishman , and no one in England who was not in the secret seems to have ...
... knew that a book written by an Englishman was more likely to win fame even in America , he published Precaution under the pretence that its author was an Englishman , and no one in England who was not in the secret seems to have ...
Էջ xx
... knew how much of what he had done was purely acci- dental , felt the reproach to be one that , in a measure , was just . As the only atonement in his power , he determined to inflict a second book , whose subject should admit of no ...
... knew how much of what he had done was purely acci- dental , felt the reproach to be one that , in a measure , was just . As the only atonement in his power , he determined to inflict a second book , whose subject should admit of no ...
Էջ 40
... knew him . It is a painful discovery we make , as we advance in life , that even those we most love are not exempt from its frail- ties . When the heart is fresh , and the view of the future unsullied by the blemishes which have been ...
... knew him . It is a painful discovery we make , as we advance in life , that even those we most love are not exempt from its frail- ties . When the heart is fresh , and the view of the future unsullied by the blemishes which have been ...
Այլ խմբագրություններ - View all
The Spy: A Tale of the Neutral Ground ; with the Portrait of the Author James Fenimore Cooper Ամբողջությամբ դիտվող - 1842 |
Common terms and phrases
American arms army aunt Betty British brother Cæsar Captain Jack Captain Lawton Captain Wharton CHAPTER character Colonel Singleton Colonel Wellmere command companion comrade continued Cooper Cooperstown cottage countenance cried danger dear death door dragoons dreadful Dunwoodie's duty enemy escape exclaimed eyes face father feelings fire Flanagan followed Frances gazing gentleman George Singleton glance hand Harper Harvey Birch head heart Henry Wharton hill Hollister honor horse interrupted Isabella John Lawton Katy knew ladies light listened look Major Dunwoodie manner Mason ment Miss Peyton Miss Wharton never night observed officer party passed paused pedler prisoner replied retired returned rock Sarah scene seemed sentinel sergeant silence Sir Henry Clinton sister Sitgreaves Skinners smile soldier soon stood surgeon tain thought tion trooper troops turned Virginians voice washerwoman Washington woman Words for study wounded young youth وو