Condensed Novels by Bret Harte
page 43 of 172 (25%)
page 43 of 172 (25%)
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of Sackville--the borough--my uncle, Fitzroy Somerset. Ah! what am
I saying? Forgive me. O Terence," she said, as her beautiful head sank on my shoulder, "you know not what I suffer!" I seized her hand and covered it with passionate kisses. But the high-bred English girl, recovering something of her former hauteur, said hastily, "Leave me, leave me, but promise!" "I promise," I replied, enthusiastically; "I WILL spare his life!" "Thanks, Terence,--thanks!" and disengaging her hand from my lips she rode rapidly away. The next morning, the Hon. Captain Henry Somerset and myself exchanged nineteen shots in the glen, and at each fire I shot away a button from his uniform. As my last bullet shot off the last button from his sleeve, I remarked quietly, "You seem now, my lord, to be almost as ragged as the gentry you sneered at," and rode haughtily away. CHAPTER II. THE FIGHTING FIFTY-SIXTH. When I was nineteen years old my father sold the Chateau d'Enville and purchased my commission in the "Fifty-sixth" with the proceeds. "I say, Denville," said young McSpadden, a boy-faced ensign, who had just joined, "you'll represent the estate in the Army, if you |
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