Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine

Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Vol. 66 No.406, August 1849

I did not recognise the handwriting, and yet the note was from one whose writing I had often seen. But formerly the writing was cramped, stiff, perpendicular, (a feigned hand, though I guessed not it was feigned;) now it was hasty, irregular, impatient--scarce a letter formed,...

Chapters

13. part I couldn't stand it at all, so I just bolted sheer round and made

three strides to the poop ladder, as dignified as was possible with ever so many plies of red yarn foul of my wrists, and a big red ball hopping after me when I'd vanished, like...

12. CHAPTER XCIV.

Two weeks, since the date of the preceding chapter, have passed; we have slept our last, for long years to come, on the English soil. It is night; and Vivian has been admitted t...

11. letter I am about to place before the reader; and you may judge how

earnestly his soul must have been in the task it had volunteered, if you observe how little, comparatively speaking, the letter contains of the subtleties and pedantries (may th...

7. CHAPTER XC.

Vivian's schemes thus prospered. He had an income that permitted him the outward appearances of a gentleman--an independence modest indeed, but independence still. We were all g...

3. CHAPTER LXXXVI.

It was during the war in Spain that a severe wound, and the fever which ensued, detained Roland at the house of a Spanish widow. His hostess had once been rich; but her fortune...

9. CHAPTER XCII.

Some days have elapsed; we are in London, my father with us; and Roland has permitted Austin to tell me his tale, and received through Austin all that Vivian's narrative to me s...

5. CHAPTER LXXXVIII.

And then, vainly grasping at every argument his blunt sense could suggest--then talked Roland much and grandly of the duties men owed--even if they threw off all love to their f...

4. CHAPTER LXXXVII.

Roland removed to France, and fixed his abode in the environs of Paris. He placed Blanche at a convent in the immediate neighbourhood, going to see her daily, and gave himself u...

6. CHAPTER LXXXIX.

"But," said Vivian, pursuing his tale, "but when you came to my aid, not knowing me--when you relieved me--when from your own lips, for the first time, I heard words that praise...

1. CHAPTER LXXXIV.

I did not recognise the handwriting, and yet the note was from one whose writing I had often seen. But formerly the writing was cramped, stiff, perpendicular, (a feigned hand, t...

8. CHAPTER XCI.

On leaving Vivian, I did not presume to promise him Roland's immediate pardon. I did not urge him to attempt to see his father. I felt the time was not come for either pardon or...

2. CHAPTER LXXXV.

VIVIAN.--Do you think I could remain where you left me? I wandered out--wandered hither. Passing at dawn through yon streets, I saw the ostlers loitering by the gates of the yar...

10. CHAPTER XCIII.

Several days elapsed--and of each day my father spent a considerable part at Vivian's lodgings. But he maintained a reserve as to his success, begged me not to question him, and...