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قراءة كتاب White Heather (Volume II of 3) A Novel

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White Heather (Volume II of 3)
A Novel

White Heather (Volume II of 3) A Novel

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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WHITE HEATHER (VOL. II)

WHITE HEATHER

A Novel

BY

WILLIAM BLACK

AUTHOR OF 'MACLEOD OF DARE,'
'JUDITH SHAKESPEARE,' ETC.

IN THREE VOLUMES

VOL. II.

London
MACMILLAN AND CO.
1885

The right of translation is reserved.

Printed by R. & R. CLARK, Edinburgh.

CONTENTS OF VOL. II.

CHAPTER I.

A FURTHER DISCOVERY

CHAPTER II.

CONFESSIONS

CHAPTER III.

HESITATIONS

CHAPTER IV.

'AMONG THE UNTRODDEN WAYS'

CHAPTER V.

A LESSON IN FLY-FISHING

CHAPTER VI.

POETA ... NON FIT

CHAPTER VII.

A LAST DAY ON THE LOCH

CHAPTER VIII.

THE PARTING

CHAPTER IX.

SOUTHWARDS

CHAPTER X.

GRAY DAYS

CHAPTER XI.

KATE

CHAPTER XII.

A SOCIAL EVENING

CHAPTER XIII.

INDUCEMENTS

CHAPTER XIV.

ENTANGLEMENTS

CHAPTER XV.

CAMPSIE GLEN

CHAPTER XVI.

THE DOWNWARD WAY

WHITE HEATHER.

CHAPTER I.

A FURTHER DISCOVERY.

It can hardly be wondered at that these suddenly presented ambitious projects—this call to be up and doing, and getting forward in the general race of the world—should add a new interest and fascination, in his eyes, to the society of the American father and daughter who had wandered into these distant wilds. And perhaps, after all, he had been merely wasting his time and throwing away his life? That solitary, contented, healthy and happy existence was a mistake—an idle dream—an anachronism, even? The common way of the world was right; and that, as he heard of it in the echoes brought by these strangers from without, was all a pushing and striving and making the most of opportunities, until the end was reached—independence and ease and wealth; the power of choosing this or that continent for a residence; the radiant happiness and glow of success. And then it all seemed so easy and practicable when he heard these two talking about their friends and the fortunes they had made; and it seemed still more easy—and a far more desirable and beautiful thing—when it was Miss Carry herself who was speaking, she seated alone in the stern of the boat, her eyes—that had a kind of surface darkness and softness, like blackberries wet with rain—helping out her speech, and betraying an open friendliness, and even conferring a charm on her descriptions of that far-off pork-producing city of the west. Mr. Hodson, as he sate upright in his easy-chair before the fire, spoke slowly and sententiously, and without any visible enthusiasm; Miss Carry, in the stern of the coble, her face all lit up with the blowing winds and the sunlight, talked with far greater vivacity, and was obviously deeply interested in the future of her companion. And it had come to this now, that, as she

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