Charles James Lever

Arthur O'Leary: His Wanderings And Ponderings In Many Lands


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       Charles James Lever

      Arthur O'Leary: His Wanderings And Ponderings In Many Lands

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066238452

       NOTICE, PRELIMINARY AND EXPLANATORY,

       BY THE EDITOR.

       ARTHUR O’LEARY.

       CHAPTER I. THE “ATTWOOD.”

       CHAPTER II. THE BOAR’S HEAD AT ROTTERDAM.

       CHAPTER III. VAN HOOGENDORP’S TALE.

       CHAPTER IV. MEMS. AND MORALIZINGS.

       CHAPTER V. ANTWERP—“THE FISCHER’S HAUS.”

       CHAPTER VI. MR. O’KELLY’S TALE

       CHAPTER VII. O’KELLY’S TALE.—CONTINUED.

       CHAPTER VIII. MR. O’KELLY’S TALE.—CONCLUDED

       CHAPTER IX. TABLE-TRAITS

       CHAPTER X. A DILEMMA

       CHAPTER XI, A FRAGMENT OF FOREST LIFE

       CHAPTER XII. CHATEAU LIFE

       CHAPTER XIII. THE ABBE’S STORY

       CHAPTER XIV. THE CHASE

       CHAPTER XV. A NARROW ESCAPE

       CHAPTER XVI. A MOUNTAIN ADVENTURE

       CHAPTER XVII. THE BORE—A SOLDIER OF THE EMPIRE.

       CHAPTER XVIII. THE RETREAT FROM LEIPSIC

       CHAPTER XIX. THE TOP OF A DILIGENCE

       CHAPTER XX. BONN AND STUDENT LIFE

       CHAPTER XXI. THE STUDENT

       CHAPTER XXII. SPAS AND GRAND DUKEDOMS

       CHAPTER XXIII. THE TRAVELLING PARTY

       CHAPTER XXIV. THE GAMBLING-ROOM

       CHAPTER XXV. A WATERING-PLACE DOCTOR

       CHAPTER XXVI. SIR HARRY WYCHERLEY

       CHAPTER XXVII. THE RECOVERY HOUSE

       CHAPTER XXVIII. THE ‘DREAM OF DEATH’

       CHAPTER XXIX. THE STRANGE GUEST

       CHAPTER XXX. THE PARK

       CHAPTER XXXI. THE BARON’S STORY

       CHAPTER XXXII. THE WARTBURG AND EISENACH.

       CHAPTER XXXIII. “ERFURT”

       CHAPTER XXXIV. THE HERR. DIRECTOR KLUG.

       Table of Contents

      BY THE EDITOR.

       Table of Contents

      When some years ago we took the liberty, in a volume of our so-called “Confessions,” to introduce to our reader’s acquaintance the gentleman whose name figures in the title page, we subjoined a brief notice, by himself, intimating the intention he entertained of one day giving to the world a farther insight into his life and opinions, under the title of “Loiterings of Arthur O’Leary.”

      It is more than probable that the garbled statement and incorrect expression of which we ourselves were guilty respecting our friend had piqued him into this declaration, which, on mature consideration, he thought fit to abandon. For, from that hour to the present one, nothing of the kind ever transpired, nor could we ascertain, by the strictest inquiry, that such a proposition of publication had ever been entertained in the West-End, or heard of in the “Row.”

      The worthy traveller had wandered away to “pastures new,” heaven knows where! and, notwithstanding repeated little paragraphs in the second advertizing column of the “Times” newspaper, assuring, “A. O’L. that if he would inform his friends where a letter would reach, all would be forgiven,” &c. the mystery of his whereabouts remained unsolved, save by the chance mention of a north-west passage traveller, who speaks of a Mr. O’Leary as having presided at a grand bottle-nosed whale dinner in Behring’s Straits, some time in the autumn of 1840; and an allusion, in the second volume of the Chevalier de Bertonville’s Discoveries