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  1. wood, the couple of flimsy chairs, and the case of books in the recess--all seemed uneasy, as if they might be tossed out to leave the room clear, with its green floor and walls, and its white rim of skirting-board, serene. On the mantlepiece were white lustres, and a small soapstone Buddha from China, grey, impassive, locked in his renunciation.

  2. Dec 1, 2005 · 106 downloads in the last 30 days. Project Gutenberg eBooks are always free! Free kindle book and epub digitized and proofread by volunteers.

  3. Mar 5, 2023 · An illustration of an open book. Books ... The Trespasser ... download 1 file . ITEM TILE download. download 1 file ...

    • FRANK A. HILTON, Esq.
    • CHAPTER I. ONE IN SEARCH OF A KINGDOM
    • CHAPTER II. IN WHICH HE CLAIMS HIS OWN
    • CHAPTER III. HE TELLS THE STORY OF HIS LIFE
    • CHAPTER IV. AN HOUR WITH HIS FATHER'S PAST
    • He put his hand in the pocket again. There was another notethis time in a woman's handwriting:
    • CHAPTER V. WHEREIN HE FINDS HIS ENEMY
    • CHAPTER VI. WHICH TELLS OF STRANGE ENCOUNTERS
    • CHAPTER VII. WHEREIN THE SEAL OF HIS HERITAGE IS SET
    • "Will you do something for me?"
    • "I shall be very glad; but isn't it late? and aren't you tired, grandmother?"
    • Gaston took his hand, and said: "I have no wish to be an enemy."
    • "Who is there?"
    • CHAPTER VIII. HE ANSWERS AN AWKWARD QUESTION
    • CHAPTER IX. HE FINDS NEW SPONSORS
    • CHAPTER X. HE COMES TO "THE WAKING OF THE FIRE"
    • "Yes, you can: just swim with the music."
    • "Yes, from a prairie fire."
    • CHAPTER XI. HE MAKES A GALLANT CONQUEST
    • CHAPTER XII. HE STANDS BETWEEN TWO WORLDS
    • CHAPTER XIII. HE JOURNEYS AFAR
    • CHAPTER XIV. IN WHICH THE PAST IS REPEATED
    • "ARISTOCRAT, POLITICIAN, LIBERTINE!"
    • CHAPTER XV. WHEREIN IS SEEN THE OLD ADAM AND THE GARDEN
    • "And you?"
    • CHAPTER XVI. WHEREIN LOVE KNOWS NO LAW SAVE THE MAN'S WILL
    • "What's the good! Better not." He tore them up also. Anotherfrom his uncle. It was brief:
    • CHAPTER XVII. THE MAN AND THE WOMAN FACE THE INTOLERABLE
    • "Nasty sea coming onafraid to try Point du Raz. Of course we didn't know you were here."
    • "They understand, then, as little as I."
    • ALICE WINGFIELD.
    • CHAPTER XVIII. "RETURN, O SHULAMITE!"

    My dear Douglas and Frank: I feel sure that this dedication will give you as much pleasure as it does me. It will at least be evidence that I do not forget good days in your company here and there in the world. I take pleasure in linking your names; for you, who have never met, meet thus in the porch of a little house that I have built. You, my dea...

    Why Gaston Belward left the wholesome North to journey afar, Jacques Brillon asked often in the brawling streets of New York, and oftener in the fog of London as they made ready to ride to Ridley Court. There was a railway station two miles from the Court, but Belward had had enough of railways. He had brought his own horse Saracen, and Jacques's b...

    Meanwhile, without a word, Gaston had mounted, ridden to the castle, and passed through the open gates into the court−yard. Inside he paused. In the main building many lights were burning. There came a rattle of wheels behind him, and he shifted to let a carriage pass. Through the window of the brougham he could see the shimmer of satin, lace, and ...

    Gaston Belward was not sentimental: that belongs to the middle−class Englishman's ideal of civilisation. But he had a civilisation akin to the highest; incongruous, therefore, to the general as the sympathy between the United States and Russia. The highest civilisation can be independent. The English aristocrat is at home in the lodge of a Sioux ch...

    In his bedroom Gaston made a discovery. He chanced to place his hand in the tail−pocket of the coat he had worn. He drew forth a letter. The ink was faded, and the lines were scrawled. It ran: It's no good. Mr. Ian's been! It's face the musik now. If you want me, say so. I'm for kicks or ha'penceno diffrense. Yours, J. He knew the writing v...

    Oh, come to me, if you would save us both! Do not fail. God help us! Oh, Robert! It was signed "Agnes." Well, here was something of mystery; but he did not trouble himself about that. He was not at Ridley Court to solve mysteries, to probe into the past, to set his father's wrongs right; but to serve himself, to reap for all those years wherein...

    How that career was continued there are many histories: Jock Lawson's mother tells of it in her way, Mrs. Gasgoyne in hers, Hovey in hers, Captain Maudsley in his; and so on. Each looks at it from an individual stand−point. But all agree on two matters: that he did things hitherto unknown in the countryside; and that he was free and affable, but co...

    A few hours afterwards Gaston sat on his horse, in a quiet corner of the grounds, while his uncle sketched him. After a time he said that Saracen would remain quiet no longer. His uncle held up the sketch. Gaston could scarcely believe that so strong and life−like a thing were possible in the time. It had force and imagination. He left his uncle wi...

    "Sophie, when you talk with the man, remember that you are near fifty, and faded. Don't be sentimental." So said Mrs. Gasgoyne to Lady Dargan, as they saw Gaston coming down the ballroom with Captain Maudsley. "Reine, you try one's patience. People would say you were not quite disinterested." "You mean Delia! Now, listen. I haven't any wish but tha...

    "I would do much for you," was his reply, for he understood! "If ever you need a friend, if ever you are in trouble, will you let me know? I wish to take an interest in you. Promise me." "I cannot promise, Lady Dargan," he answered, "for such trouble as I have had before I have had to bear alone, and the habit is fixed, I fear. Still, I am grateful...

    "I shall sleep better after," she responded, gently. She then began to review the past; her own long unhappiness, Robert's silence, her uncertainty as to his fate, and the after hopelessness, made greater by Ian's conduct. In low, kind words she spoke of his coming and the renewal of her hopes, coupled with fear also that he might not fit in with h...

    Sir William rose, looking at them both. He could not understand Ian's attitude, and he distrusted. Yet peace was better than war. Ian's truce was also based on a belief that Gaston would make skittles of things. A little while afterwards Gaston sat in his room, turning over events in his mind. Time and again his thoughts returned to the one thing m...

    There was no reply. Still the knocking went on. He quietly opened the gate, and threw it back. A figure in white stepped through and slowly passed him. It was Alice Wingfield. He spoke to her. She did not answer. He went close to her and saw that she was asleep! She was making for the entrance door. He took her hand gently, and led her into a side ...

    The next morning Brillon brought a note from Ian Belward, which said that he was starting, and asked Gaston to be sure and come to Paris. The note was carelessly friendly. After reading it, he lay thinking. Presently he chanced to see Jacques look intently at him. "Well, Brillon, what is it?!" he asked genially. Jacques had come on better than Gast...

    Gaston lay for many days at "The Whisk o' Barley." During that time the inn was not open to customers. The woman also for two days hung at the point of death, and then rallied. She remembered the events of the painful night, and often asked after Gaston. Somehow, her horror of her son's death at his hands was met by the injury done him now. She vag...

    A few days afterwards Gaston joined a small party at Peppingham. Without any accent life was made easy for him. He was alone much, and yet, to himself, he seemed to have enough of company. The situation did not impose itself conspicuously. Delia gave him no especial reason to be vain. She had not an exceeding wit, but she had charm, and her talk wa...

    She did swim with it. Never before had Peppingham drawing−room heard a song like this; never before, never after, did any of Delia Gasgoyne's friends hear her sing as she did that night. And Lady Gravesend whispered for a week afterwards that Delia Gasgoyne sang a wild love song in the most abandoned way with that colonial Belward. Really a song of...

    "Not always. I've ridden through." "Alors, it's one chance in ten thousand!" "There's a woman to be thought ofJacques." "There was that other time." "Well, then?" Presently Jacques said: "Who is she, monsieur?" Gaston did not answer. He was thinking hard. Jacques said no more. The next morning early the guests knew who the woman was, and by noon Ja...

    Gaston let himself drift. The game of love and marriage is exciting, the girl was affectionate and admiring, the world was genial, and all things came his way. Towards the end of the hunting season Captain Maudsley had an accident. It would prevent him riding to hounds again, and at his suggestion, backed by Lord Dunfolly and Lord Dargan, Gaston be...

    The next morning he went down to the family solicitor's office. He had done so, off and on, for weeks. He spent the time in looking through old family papers, fishing out ancient documents, partly out of curiosity, partly from an unaccountable presentiment. He had been there about an hour this morning when a clerk brought him a small box, which, he...

    Politicians gossiped. Where was the new member? His friends could not tell, further than that he had gone abroad. Lord Faramond did not know, but fetched out his lower lip knowingly. "The fellow has instinct for the game," he said. Sketches, portraits were in the daily and weekly journals, and one hardy journalist even gave an interviewwhich had ne...

    Next morning Gaston was visited by Meyerbeer the American journalist, of whose profession he was still ignorant. He saw him only as a man of raw vigour of opinion, crude manners, and heavy temperament. He had not been friendly to him at night, and he was surprised at the morning visit. The hour was such that Gaston must ask him to breakfast. The tw...

    Then, under that he would put: "CAN THE ETHIOPIAN CHANGE HIS SKIN, OR THE LEOPARD HIS SPOTS?" Jer. xi. 23. The morality of such a thing? Morality only had to do with ruining a girl's name, or robbery. How did it concern this? So Mr. Meyerbeer kept his ears open. Presently one of the students said to Bagshot, a young artist: "How does ...

    At Ridley Court and Peppingham all was serene to the eye. Letters had come to the Court at least once every two weeks from Gaston, and the minds of the Baronet and his wife were at ease. They even went so far as to hope that he would influence his uncle; for it was clear to them both that whatever Gaston's faults were, they were agreeably different...

    "He is mine." His look burned into her soul−how deep, how joyful! She turned away, her face going suddenly pale. She kept the horse for some time, but at last gave him up again to Jacques. Gaston stepped from the doorway into the garden and met her. It was now dusk. Annette was inside. They walked together in silence for a time. Presently she drew ...

    In another week it was announced that Mademoiselle Victorine would take a month's holiday; to the sorrow of her chief, and to the delight of Mr. Meyerbeer, who had not yet discovered his man, though he had a pretty scandal well−nigh brewed. Count Ploare was no more, Gaston Belward was. Zoug−Zoug was in the country at Fontainebleau, working at his p...

    Almost the first person that Gaston recognised in London was Cluny Vosse. He had been to Victoria Station to see a friend off by the train, and as he was leaving, Gaston and he recognised each other. The lad's greeting was a little shy until he saw that Gaston was cool and composed as usual in effect, nothing had happened. Cluny was delighted, and ...

    Almost the first person that Gaston recognised in London was Cluny Vosse. He had been to Victoria Station to see a friend off by the train, and as he was leaving, Gaston and he recognised each other. The lad's greeting was a little shy until he saw that Gaston was cool and composed as usual in effect, nothing had happened. Cluny was delighted, and ...

    Almost the first person that Gaston recognised in London was Cluny Vosse. He had been to Victoria Station to see a friend off by the train, and as he was leaving, Gaston and he recognised each other. The lad's greeting was a little shy until he saw that Gaston was cool and composed as usual in effect, nothing had happened. Cluny was delighted, and ...

    Almost the first person that Gaston recognised in London was Cluny Vosse. He had been to Victoria Station to see a friend off by the train, and as he was leaving, Gaston and he recognised each other. The lad's greeting was a little shy until he saw that Gaston was cool and composed as usual in effect, nothing had happened. Cluny was delighted, and ...

    Almost the first person that Gaston recognised in London was Cluny Vosse. He had been to Victoria Station to see a friend off by the train, and as he was leaving, Gaston and he recognised each other. The lad's greeting was a little shy until he saw that Gaston was cool and composed as usual in effect, nothing had happened. Cluny was delighted, and ...

    Almost the first person that Gaston recognised in London was Cluny Vosse. He had been to Victoria Station to see a friend off by the train, and as he was leaving, Gaston and he recognised each other. The lad's greeting was a little shy until he saw that Gaston was cool and composed as usual in effect, nothing had happened. Cluny was delighted, and ...

  4. Sep 17, 2014 · Download The Trespasser free in PDF & EPUB format. Download D H Lawrence's The Trespasser for your kindle, tablet, IPAD, PC or mobile.

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