Graham's Magazine
Graham's Magazine Vol XXXII. No. 3. March 1848
On the evening of the 25th of March, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and thirty-nine, the ship Gentile, of Boston, lay at anchor in the harbor of Valetta.
Graham's Magazine
On the evening of the 25th of March, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and thirty-nine, the ship Gentile, of Boston, lay at anchor in the harbor of Valetta.
"Well," rejoined his sister, playfully, "be that as it may, Harry, I should like to see the young lady; and beside, I want as many pretty girls as I can get, they always make a...
4. Chapter 4"I've told you about a great many days' works, boys, but there is one leaf in my log-book of which you as yet know nothing. It is now about six years since I was in this part of...
7. Chapter 7_Ber._ Oh, would that now my heart Were torn with every grief the earth has known, Then would this sense be sweeter by tenfold! Where didst thou learn the secret, and from whom?
8. Chapter 8It has again become necessary to advance the time; and we shall take the occasion thus offered to make a few explanations touching certain events which have been passed over wit...
9. Chapter 9I have said that the Abbé G---- had a room in some dark corner of a hotel in the Rue de Seine, or Rue de la Harpe--which of the two it was I really forget. At any rate, the hote...
10. Chapter 10Poor Clerie! but I have told his story,[A] so I will not tell it again. It made a sad greeting for me on the lips of the abbé, when I first came back to the city after a half ye...
1. Chapter 1On the evening of the 25th of March, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and thirty-nine, the ship Gentile, of Boston, lay at anchor in the harbor of Valetta.
11. Chapter 11"You had better leave Harry alone about that girl," said Tom Leveredge to his sisters, who were talking very fast, and sometimes both together, in the heat and excitement of the...
6. Chapter 6_Ber._ Save by your trusty servant here, who says He saw his master, from without, unclose The shutters of his laboratory while The sun was yet unrisen. It is well; This turning...
2. Chapter 2Mr. Langley had just commenced his supper with a ravenous appetite, stimulated by the tantalizing view of our previous gastronomic performances, which he had had through the sky...
3. Chapter 3We laid almost a week longer wind-bound. At last the skipper waxed impatient, and one fine morning we got out our boats, and with the help of the Pharsalia's boats and crew, we...
5. Chapter 5_Lor._ Ay, signor, very sure. 'Tis but a moment since I saw the thing-- Bernardo, who last night was sworn thy son, Hath made a villainous barter of thine honor. Thou may'st rel...