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Автор: Pemberton Max
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Языкознание
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isbn: 4064066387372
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       Max Pemberton

      Mr. Rowl

       Historical Novel

      e-artnow, 2021

       Contact: [email protected]

      EAN: 4064066387372

       Part I. The Happy Valley

       Chapter I. “Le Jeune et Beau Dunois”

       Chapter II. “Mr. Rowl” Gets into Trouble

       Chapter III. How Juliana Asserted Her Independence

       Chapter IV. “Fortune Favours the——”

       Chapter V. “Broke-parole”

       Chapter VI. Fiat Justitia, Ruat Cœlum

       Part II. The Cost of a Whim

       Chapter I. Forgotten?

       Chapter II. The Shadow of Huntingdon Gaol

       Chapter III. Two Remorses

       Chapter IV. A Better Gift than “Rasselas”

       Chapter V. The Yoke-fellow

       Chapter VI. Raoul Meets the Devil in Bridgwater

       Chapter VII. No Escape

       Part III. The Making of a Wildcat

       Chapter I. Tight Shoes

       Chapter II. Departure of the Señora Tomás

       Chapter III. Departure of Her Successor

       Chapter IV. The Battle of the Spare Bedroom

       Chapter V. The Cruise of the “Kestrel”

       Chapter VI. Revenge and Hervey Barrington

       Chapter VII. “I Have the Honour to Report . . .”

       Chapter VIII. The Sapphire Necklace and the Major of the Buffs

       Chapter IX. News from Plymouth

       Chapter X. “Will He Hate Me Still?”

       Chapter XI. The Last Shot

       Part IV. A Month of Miracles

       Chapter I. Several Discoveries

       Chapter II. Juliana’s Immortelles

       Chapter III. Relinquishing a Dream

       Chapter IV. What Miss Lavinia Brought Home

       Chapter V. The Marriage of Dunois

      The author desires to express great indebtedness to the late Francis Abell’s most valuable and interesting book, “Prisoners of War in Britain, 1756-1815,” without which this story would probably never have been written, and also to the late Dr. T. J. Walker’s “The Dépôt for Prisoners of War at Norman Cross, Huntingdonshire, 1796 to 1816.”

      PART I

       THE HAPPY VALLEY

       Table of Contents

      CHAPTER I

       “LE JEUNE ET BEAU DUNOIS”

       Table of Contents

      “Here is neither labour to be endured nor danger to be dreaded, yet here is all that labour or danger can procure or purchase. Look round and tell me which of your wants is without supply: if you want nothing, how are you unhappy?”—Rasselas, chap. iii.

      It was quite likely that at an earlier stage of the afternoon the youthful and lively little company in the drawing room at Northover had been playing forfeits, or something equally childish. But when Mr. Ralph Bentley, the owner of Northover, strolled along the terrace about half-past five o’clock with a couple of companions, they were making music, for a very pleasant tenor voice came floating through the windows, which, because it was a fine mid-March day, were slightly open. The voice was singing “Since First I Saw Your Face.”

      The middle-aged gentlemen outside stopped to listen. “Very tuneful, egad!” observed one of them. “Who’s the minstrel, Bentley?”

      “Judging from the ‘r’s,’ I should say it is our captive friend des Sablières,” responded the master of the house with a smile. “Don’t you think so, Ramage?”

      “ ‘The sun whose beams most glorious are,’ ” sang the voice, but the brow of the gentleman just addressed in no way resembled that luminary.

      “What right has a French prisoner to be singing English songs?” he growled. “If he must sing at all, let him keep to his own jargon!”

      “But surely one should admire the Frenchman’s enterprise,” objected the first speaker. “And he sings the old song very well. How did he learn it, I wonder?”

      “Better ask him, Sturgis,” replied Mr. Bentley with a twinkle,