Verney court, Volume 11878 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 11
Page 28
... spirits . They are all afraid of him , but I'm not afraid of him , not a bit . He's Mr. Verney's steward , and manages everything . He has lived here ever since I was born , but no one knows where he came from . It seems he appeared ...
... spirits . They are all afraid of him , but I'm not afraid of him , not a bit . He's Mr. Verney's steward , and manages everything . He has lived here ever since I was born , but no one knows where he came from . It seems he appeared ...
Page 43
... slept in this very bed that I was lying in , and occupied this room , and who now lay in a colder and narrower resting place , and fancied that those were their spirits tapping at the door for admittance , angry that AN IRISH NOVEL . 43.
... slept in this very bed that I was lying in , and occupied this room , and who now lay in a colder and narrower resting place , and fancied that those were their spirits tapping at the door for admittance , angry that AN IRISH NOVEL . 43.
Page 44
Maria Nethercott. spirits tapping at the door for admittance , angry that the room which had been theirs in life , and that had lain undisturbed ever since their death , should now be profaned by a stranger . There was another thing ...
Maria Nethercott. spirits tapping at the door for admittance , angry that the room which had been theirs in life , and that had lain undisturbed ever since their death , should now be profaned by a stranger . There was another thing ...
Page 47
... spirit daunted , And said , as plain as whisper in the ear , This place is worse than haunted . " I WAS awakened by a rap , too sharp and decided to be dealt by any ghostly fingers . I called out , " come in , " and Catherine entered ...
... spirit daunted , And said , as plain as whisper in the ear , This place is worse than haunted . " I WAS awakened by a rap , too sharp and decided to be dealt by any ghostly fingers . I called out , " come in , " and Catherine entered ...
Page 63
... . She was very pale , and I thought her eyes had a strange , spirit look in them , as of one who had held commune with the dead . A A superstitious terror suddenly seized me . I hastily walked towards the AN IRISH NOVEL . 63.
... . She was very pale , and I thought her eyes had a strange , spirit look in them , as of one who had held commune with the dead . A A superstitious terror suddenly seized me . I hastily walked towards the AN IRISH NOVEL . 63.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
afraid airth Alley answered appeared Arrah asked Baker beautiful began beside better boat Catherine's Cecil Nugent cern Crawley craythurs cried d'ye dark dead dead silence Donal Dhue door dreary dress entered eyes face fancy father fear feel felt fire fright gallery gazed glance Grace hair hand Hazelgrove head hear heard heerd hyena Ireland IRISH NOVEL kape King William III knew lady laughing listening looked marry mind minutes Miss Catherine Miss Melville moorland morning mother mountains ness never night old Donal passed Percival pity Preston replied returned round ruined chamber seemed seen Shane O'Reilly silence sleep smile speak sprite stood storm strange stranger suddenly sure talk tell tenantry thing thought told tone took turned Verney Court Verney's voice walked watch wind window wish words Wreck young
Popular passages
Page 47 - O'er all there hung a shadow and a fear ; A sense of mystery the spirit daunted, And said, as plain as whisper in the ear, The place is Haunted!
Page 13 - The youth of green savannahs spake, And many an endless, endless lake With all its fairy crowds Of islands, that together lie As quietly as spots of sky Among the evening clouds.
Page 85 - And sic a night he taks the road in As ne'er poor sinner was abroad in. The wind blew as 'twad blawn its last; The rattling...
Page 240 - twas visible— I saw not, but I felt that it was there. That which I saw was the revealed abode Of Spirits in beatitude: my heart Swelled in my breast—' I have been dead,' I cried,
Page 277 - ... dress that one of the young men — the young savants — was so good as to drop there. Did you see the young savants who work under Gordon's orders ? I thought they were too forlorn ; there is n't one of them you would look at. If you can believe it, there was n't one of them that looked at me ; they took no more notice of me than if I had been the charwoman. They might have shown me some attention, at least, as the wife of the proprietor. What is it that Gordon 's called — is n't there some...
Page 259 - I could not have been asleep for more than an hour, when I was awakened by the peculiar creaking noise which the opening of my door always produced.
Page 1 - SEVERAL years have passed since the events occurred which I am about to relate in this narrative.