Hugh Crichton's Romance
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Оглавление
Christabel R. Coleridge. Hugh Crichton's Romance
Hugh Crichton's Romance
Table of Contents
Part 1, Chapter I
Hugh’s Story
Part 1, Chapter II
Violante
Part 1, Chapter III
Mr Spencer Crichton
Part 1, Chapter IV
The Singing-Class
Part 1, Chapter V
The Mattei Family
Part 1, Chapter VI
Il Don Giovanni
Part 1, Chapter VII
Brotherly Counsel
Part 1, Chapter VIII
White Flowers
Part 2, Chapter IX
Contrasts
Part 2, Chapter X
The Time of Roses
Part 2, Chapter XI
Oxley Manor
Part 2, Chapter XII
Pros and Cons
Part 2, Chapter XIII
Contrary Winds
Part 2, Chapter XIV
Left to Herself
Part 3, Chapter XV
Arthur’s Story
Part 3, Chapter XVI
Mysie
Part 3, Chapter XVII
Smooth Waters
Part 3, Chapter XVIII
Out in the Cold
Part 3, Chapter XIX
Sunday and Monday
Part 3, Chapter XX
The Golden Wedding
Part 3, Chapter XXI
The Morning Light
Part 3, Chapter XXII
Dark Days
Part 3, Chapter XXIII
Flossy
Part 4, Chapter XXIV
Chance and Change
Part 4, Chapter XXV
Private Theatricals
Part 4, Chapter XXVI
Lost
Part 4, Chapter XXVII
Caletto
Part 4, Chapter XXVIII
Signor Arthur
Part 4, Chapter XXIX
No Good at All
Part 4, Chapter XXX
New Kensington
Part 4, Chapter XXXI
Relations New and Old
Part 4, Chapter XXXII
Old Acquaintance
Part 5, Chapter XXXIII
Haunted
Part 5, Chapter XXXIV
School
Part 5, Chapter XXXV
Discords
Part 5, Chapter XXXVI
Beginning Afresh
Part 5, Chapter XXXVII
Faint-Hearted
Part 5, Chapter XXXVIII
Pin-Pricks
Part 5, Chapter XXXIX
Divided!
Part 5, Chapter XL
Mr Blandford of Fordham
Part 5, Chapter XLI
Among the Primroses
Part 6, Chapter XLII
At the Year’s End
Part 6, Chapter XLIII
Another Chance
Part 6, Chapter XLIV
Jem’s Ideal
Part 6, Chapter XLV
Past and Present
Part 6, Chapter XLVI
Perplexities
Part 6, Chapter XLVII
Thunder-Showers
Part 6, Chapter XLVIII
The Meeting of the Waters
Part 6, Chapter XLIX
The Lesson of Love
Part 6, Chapter L
The Lesson of Life
Отрывок из книги
Christabel R. Coleridge
Published by Good Press, 2021
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“Yes, for you will see Violante!” cried her daughter, Emily.
Mrs Tollemache was a little gentle lady, who, spite of several years of widowhood, spent in keeping house for her son in Civita Bella, always looked as if she were ready for an English country Sunday, with her soft grey dresses and white ribbons, slightly unfashionable, not very well made, and yet unmistakably lady-like, just as the diffidence and unreadiness of her manner did not detract in the least from its good breeding. Her daughter was a tall girl of sixteen, with bright, straight falling hair, and a rosy face, simple and honest, though her frank, fearless manners, and capacity for conversation, indicated a young lady who had seen something of the world. Her brother, the consul, many years her elder, represented English diplomacy in a pleasant, cheery, if not very deep or astute fashion to the benighted foreigners by whom he was surrounded.
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