Lippincott's Magazine

Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, Volume 12, No. 28, July, 1873

SOME PASSAGES IN SHELLEY'S EARLY HISTORY By JANUARY SEARLE. CHANGES By EMMA LAZARUS. OUR MONTHLY GOSSIP. A Sleeping-car Serenade By W.G.B. Fables For The Youth By SARSFIELD YOUNG. A Picture With A History. Hints For Novel-Writers. NOTES. LITERATURE OF THE DAY. Books Received.

Chapters

13. CHAPTER XI.

Frank Lavender was a good deal more concerned than he chose to show about the effect that Sheila was likely to produce on his aunt; and when at length the day arrived on which t...

8. CHAPTER XV.

It was a long time before he came. Months afterward, one evening when the express-train rushed into the dépôt, Catharine went down through the walnut trees into the garden. She...

3. Chapter XI.--The First Plunge.

SOME PASSAGES IN SHELLEY'S EARLY HISTORY By JANUARY SEARLE. CHANGES By EMMA LAZARUS. OUR MONTHLY GOSSIP. A Sleeping-car Serenade By W.G.B. Fables For The Youth By SARSFIELD YOUN...

10. CHAPTER VI.

In sending word to Anton to fetch us from the inn at Nieder Olang that especial afternoon, we had not been aware that we had chosen a place and hour when most of the pious male...

12. CHAPTER X.

He was about to add "Sheila," but suddenly stopped. The girl, who had hastily come forward to meet him with a glad look in her eyes and with both hands outstretched, doubtless p...

9. CHAPTER V.

We had not gone many yards when we noticed a grand old mansion with gray slopes of roof and stone galleries on arched pillars, and, asking its history, learned that it was a des...

7. CHAPTER XIV.

Doctor McCall had been five minutes too late for the first train, and so had been delayed for the express in which Kitty started on her adventure. Commonplace accidents determin...

5. CHAPTER XII.

Miss Muller's message was never delivered, but Doctor McCall did not leave Berrytown that morning. Going down the road, he had caught sight of the old Book-house, and Kitty in h...

4. CHAPTER XI.

Catharine sprang from her bed at daybreak that morning. She could scarcely stop singing in the bath. She had so much to do, so much to do! The air blew briskly, the factory bell...

11. scene I spoke to him of the merry Christmas-times in the Fatherland.

He shook his head mournfully: "Ach Gott! die werd' ich nie wiedersehen" ("I shall never see them again"). The only thing which he seemed very much to regret was that he should n...

6. CHAPTER XIII.

That evening, as Miss Muller sat alone with Hero in her room (just as the neuralgia was beginning), the door opened and Miss Vogdes entered. The girl turned a harassed, worn cou...

1. Chapter XV.

2. Chapter VI.