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Chapter 4. Father Mackworth

Word Count: 1317    |    Released on: 18/11/2017

but their immediate relations and friends. 1 have my eye, at this moment, on a young gentleman of the mature age ot two, the instances of whose

l dead upon the public ear; and so, for the present, I shall leave Charles Ravensh

to conjure up any previous recollection to that. He had certainly a very indistinct one of having been happier, and having lived quietly in pleasant country places with a kind woman who

wished to inflict the heaviest conceivable punishment on the poor unconscious little innocent, he could have

he art of tormenting. He never strikes; he does not know how to clench his fist. He is an arrant coward, according to an English schoolboy's definition of the word: but at pinching, pulling hair, ear pulling, and

and, with the cannon of Trafalgar ringing as it were in their ears, these young French gentlemen seized on Mackworth as a lawful prize providentially delivered into their hands. We do not know what he may have been under happier auspices, or what he may be yet with a more favourable

't know the process. I have seen the article when finished, and am familiar with it. I know the trade mark on it as well as I know the Tower mark on my rifle. I may predicate of

fford. A comparison of notes with two or three other great ladies, brought about a consultation, and a letter to Rome, the result of which was that a young Englishman of presentable exter

t in the house, and found that he was by far the superior of all in wit and educatio

to move, till chance threw into his hand a whip wherewith he might drive Densil where he would. He discovered a scandalous liaison of poor Densil's, and in an indirect manner let him know that he knew all about it. This served to cement his influence until the appearance of Mrs. Ravenshoe the

that was Mrs. Ravenshoe; after her death he was master of the situation with regard to the eldest of the boys. He had partly guessed, ever since he overheard the conversation of Densil and his wife, that some sort of bargain existed between them about the second child; but he paid little heed to it. It was, therefore,

would be beloved as well as respected, and with a happy audacity he set to work to win that poor wild foolish heart to himself, using such arts of pleasing as must have been furnished by his own mother wit, and could never have been learned in a hundred years from a Jesuit college. The poor heart was not a hard one to win; and, the day the

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Contents

Preface Chapter 1. An Account of the Family of Ravenshoe Chapter 2. Supplementary to the Foregoing Chapter 3. In which Our Hero's Troubles Begin Chapter 4. Father Mackworth Chapter 5. Ranford Chapter 6. The Warren Hastings Chapter 7. In which Charles and Lord Welter Distinguish Themselves at the University Chapter 8. John Marston Chapter 9. Adelaide Chapter 10. Lady Ascot's Little Nap
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13. The Black Hare
Chapter 14. Lord Saltire's Visit, and Some of His Opinions
Chapter 15. Charles's "Liddell and Scott."
Chapter 16. Marston's Arrival
Chapter 17. In which There is Another Shipwreck
Chapter 18. Marston's Disappointment
Chapter 19. Ellen's Flight
Chapter 20. Ranford Again
Chapter 21. Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos
Chapter 22. The Last Glimpse of Oxford
Chapter 23 The Last Glimpse of the Old World
Chapter 24. The First Glimpse of the New World
Chapter 25
Chapter 26. The Grand Crash
Chapter 27 The Coup De Grace
Chapter 28. Flight
Chapter 29. Charles's Retreat Upon London
Chapter 30. Mr. Sloane
Chapter 31. Lieutenant Hornby
Chapter 32. Some of the Humours of a London Mews
Chapter 33 A Glimpse of Some Old Friends
Chapter 34. In which Fresh Mischief is Brewed
Chapter 35
Chapter 36. The Derby
Chapter 37. Lord Welter's Menage
Chapter 38. The House Full of Ghosts
Chapter 39 Charles's Explanation with Lord Welter
Chapter 40. A Dinner Party Among Some Old Friends
Chapter 41. Charles's Second Expedition to St. John's Wood
Chapter 42. Ravenshoe Hall, During All this
Chapter 43. A Meeting
Chapter 44. Another Meeting
Chapter 45. Half a Million
Chapter 46. To Lunch with Lord Ascot
Chapter 47. Lady Hainault's Blotting-book
Chapter 48. In which Cuthbert Begins to See Things in a New Light
Chapter 49
Chapter 50. Shreds and Patches
Chapter 51. In which Charles Comes to Life Again
Chapter 52
Chapter 53. Captain Archer Turns up
Chapter 54. Charles Meets Hornby at Last
Chapter 55. Archer's Proposal
Chapter 56. Scutari
Chapter 57. What Charles Did with His Last Eighteen Shillings
Chapter 58. The North Side of Grosvenor Square
Chapter 59. Lord Ascot's Crowning Act of Folly
Chapter 60. The Bridge at Last
Chapter 61. Saved
Chapter 62. Mr. Jackson's Big Trout
Chapter 63. In which Gus Cuts Flora's Doll's Corns
Chapter 64. The Allied Armies Advance on Ravenshoe
Chapter 65
Chapter 66
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