Harper's New Monthly Magazine

Harper's New Monthly Magazine, vol. 3, no. 18, November, 1851

While I was dressing, a note was handed to me from the cure, apologizing for his departure without seeing me, and begging, as a great favor, that I would not leave the Chateau till his return. He said that the count's spirits had benefited greatly by our agreeable converse, an...

Chapters

3. CHAPTER XLV.

Whatever opinion may be formed of the character of the celebrated conspiracy of Georges and Pichegru, the mode of its discovery, and the secret rules by which its plans were det...

10. CHAPTER XXII.

Harley L'Estrange is seated beside Helen at the lattice-window in the cottage at Norwood. The bloom of reviving health is on the child's face, and she is listening with a smile,...

1. CHAPTER XLIII.

While I was dressing, a note was handed to me from the cure, apologizing for his departure without seeing me, and begging, as a great favor, that I would not leave the Chateau t...

2. CHAPTER XLIV.

When the French army fell back across the Sambre, after the battle of Mons, a considerable portion of the rear, who covered the retreat, were cut off by the enemy, for it became...

9. CHAPTER XXI.

Randall Leslie, on leaving Audley, repaired to Frank's lodgings, and after being closeted with the young guardsman an hour or so, took his way to Limmer's hotel, and asked for M...

4. CHAPTER XVI.

Before a table in the apartments appropriated to him in his father's house at Knightsbridge, sate Lord L'Estrange, sorting or destroying letters and papers--an ordinary symptom...

8. CHAPTER XX.

While Leonard Fairfield had been obscurely wrestling against poverty, neglect, hunger, and dread temptations, bright had been the opening day, and smooth the upward path, of Ran...

7. CHAPTER XIX.

It was a pretty, detached cottage, with its windows looking over the wild heaths of Norwood, to which Harley rode daily to watch the convalescence of his young charge--an object...

5. CHAPTER XVII.

Harley spent his day in his usual desultory, lounging manner--dined in his quiet corner at his favorite club--Nero, not admitted into the club, patiently waited for him outside...

6. CHAPTER XVIII.

Harley L'Estrange was a man whom all things that belong to the romantic and poetic side of our human life deeply impressed. When he came to learn the ties between these two chil...