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Raleigh's The English Novel; Simonds's An Introduction to the Study of English Fiction; Cross's The Development of the English Novel; Jusserand's The English Novel in the Time of Shakespeare; Stoddard's The Evolution of the English Novel; Warren's The History of the English Novel previous to the Seventeenth Century; Masson's British Novelists and their Styles; S. Lanier's The English Novel; Hamilton's the Materials and Methods of Fiction; Perry's A Study of Prose Fiction.

Lanier's hurt is more mental than physical, therefore the more difficult for me to reach." "You've seen him this morning?" "Twice, Mrs. Sumter, and I'm going again as soon as we've seen you home."

Sumter's quarters were about the middle of the row. Lanier's were at the eastward end. For the moment the complaint of the aggrieved sergeant was ignored. All men stood waiting, watching. Then, on a sudden, two or three black forms darted from the shadow of the middle quarters.

"Oh, father, father it was it was what I heard when she screamed and fell?" "What did you hear?" "The other voice his voice. It said plainly, 'Miriam, hush! Don't you know me?" "Bob," said Mr. Ennis, sauntering in to his comrade's bedside the following morning, "I'm instructed to pay you a kiss." Lanier's bandaged head spun on the pillow. He had but one girl in his mind. "Wh who?" he demanded.

This ermineless expounder counterfeits much gowned gravity, looking wisely impartial. To dispel moody, pensive abstractions requires that oft and anew this "Daniel come to judgment." Paul Lanier's crazed caprices grow more frequent. Tractable moods are now exceptional.

I refused, and said some wild, bitter things. He then roughly pushed me back, and I fell overboard." The mystery of Paul Lanier's conduct greatly puzzled all. However, it was evident that he had not intended the consequence of his rash act. This was the result of brutal passion at her resistance to some other design. What could he have intended in his deceitful ruse?

Bell, and suggested, in a tentative way, that Mrs. Bell should go to some quiet country place for a month, but the woman shook her head. "I cannot leave the city, now," she said. "I have a great quantity of sewing that must be done for Miss Lanier's wedding in September." "Couldn't you take it along?" asked Silvia. "No," she said quietly, but decidedly.

That for an indefinite period I must be dependent upon the bounties of those depraved creatures who had rescued me from the Thames current seemed horrible. The presence of these I continually loathed and feared. It appeared fate's cruel decree that I should escape Paul Lanier's murderous designs but to suffer this prolonged, indefinite, loathsome danger.

As you saw me first, so now!" Some lines of Lanier's poem of the morning were ringing wildly in Carl's ears. "The blades of the marsh grass stir; Passeth a hurrying sound of wings that westward whir; Passeth, and all is still; and the currents cease to run; And the sea and the marsh are one." "Why do you look at me so?" asked Keela.

He swore he'd return them the next day, and Rafferty let him have them, and he put them on in the lieutenant's back room. Then he and I went up the rear fence and caught sight of Number Five Trooper Kelly. Cary knew him and went ahead to 'fix things' with him, as he said. Kelly had seen us come out of Lieutenant Lanier's back gate, and was suspicious.