The Disowned, Volume 1.
name,
me, you s
e-is-nay, I must
young gentleman, for whom we trust very soon, both for our own c
y and interest to serve our hero as some mental occupation until his return. The bonny landlady came up in a new cap, with blue ribbons, in the course of the evening, to pay a visit of inquir
pe, with a courtesy, "I trus
said the gallant youth,
uoth the
ddenly darted across the mind of the hostess. Strong as are the pr
ng' was full of shocking accounts of swindlers and cheats; and I gave nine pounds odd shillings for th
Mrs. Taptape, looking
ame he should put down in his book for the med
the youth, eleva
on, sir, the
so pretty as-dear me, what a beautiful cap
, as I was saying, what name shall I tell Mr. Bossolton to put in
ll, Bossolton is certainly the most singular name I ever heard; he d
t sharply; "but it is your name, not hi
order to answer a query which most men find requires very little deliber
aughter, who was listening at the keyhole; "bu
would send up my boxes; and ge
he landlady, and s
e, and so novel a one too!-Clarence Linden,-why, if I were that pretty girl at the ba
ther name would
me was Jeremiah Bossolton, for instance, it would not, to my
serve; and the sympathy of taste between him and the sufferer gave rise to a conversation less cold and commonplace than it might otherwise have been. And when Mordaunt, after a stay of some length, rose to depart, he pressed Linden to return his visit before he left that part o
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