Charles James Lever

The Daltons: Three Roads In Life


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       Charles James Lever

      The Daltons: Three Roads In Life

      Complete Edition (Vol. 1&2)

      e-artnow, 2020

       Contact: [email protected]

      EAN 4064066389840

       Volume 1

       Volume 2

      Volume 1

       Table of Contents

       PREFACE.

       CHAPTER I. BADEN OUT OF SEASON.

       CHAPTER II. AN HUMBLE INTERIOR

       CHAPTER III. THE FOREST ROAD.

       CHAPTER IV. THE ONSLOWS

       CHAPTER V. THE PATIENT

       CHAPTER VI. A FIRST VISIT.

       CHAPTER VII. A LESSON IN PISTOL-SHOOTING

       CHAPTER VIII. THE NIGHT EXCURSION

       CHAPTER IX. A FINE LADY'S BLANDISHMENTS.

       CHAPTER X. A FAMILY DISCUSSION.

       CHAPTER XI. A PEEP BETWEEN THE SHUTTERS AT A NEW CHARACTER.

       CHAPTER XII. MR. ALBERT JEKYL

       CHAPTER XIII. A SUSPICIOUS VISITOR

       CHAPTER XIV. AN EMBARRASSING QUESTION.

       CHAPTER XV. CONTRASTS

       CHAPTER XVI. THE “SAAL” OF THE “RUSSIE.”

       CHAPTER XVII. A FAMILY DISCUSSION.

       CHAPTER XVIII. CARES AND CROSSES

       CHAPTER XIX. PREPARATIONS FOR THE ROAD.

       CHAPTER XX. A VERY SMALL “INTERIOR.”

       CHAPTER XXI. A FAMILY PICTURE

       CHAPTER XXII. KATE.

       CHAPTER XXIII. A SMALL SUPPER PARTY.

       CHAPTER XXIV. A MIDNIGHT RECEPTION

       CHAPTER XXV. A “LEVANTER.”

       CHAPTER XXVI. THE END OF THE FIRST ACT

       CHAPTER XXVII. A SMALL DINNER AT THE VILLINO ZOE.

       CHAPTER XXVIII. THE VISCOUNT'S VISION.

       CHAPTER XXIX. FRANK'S JOURNEY.

       CHAPTER XXX. THE THREAT OP “A SLIGHT EMBARRASSMENT.”

       CHAPTER XXXI. A CONVIVIAL EVENING

       CHAPTER XXXII. AN INVASION.

       CHAPTER XXXIII. THE CONCLUSION OF A “GRAND DINNER.”

       CHAPTER XXXIV. JEKYL'S COUNSELS

       CHAPTER XXXV. RACCA MORLACHE.

       CHAPTER XXXVI. A STREET RENCONTRE

       CHAPTER XXXVII. PROPOSALS.

       CHAPTER XXXVIII. AN ARRIVAL.

       CHAPTER XXXIX. PRATOLINO.

       Table of Contents

      IF the original conception of this tale was owing to the story of an old and valued schoolfellow who took service in Austria, and rose to rank and honors there, all the rest was purely fictitious. My friend had made a deep impression on my mind by his narratives of that strange life, wherein, in the very midst of our modern civilization, an old-world tradition still has its influence, making the army of to-day the veritable sons and descendants of those who grouped around the bivouac fires in Wallenstein's camp. Of that more than Oriental submission that graduated deference to military rank that chivalrous devotion to the “Kaiser” whicli enter into the soldier heart of Austria, I have been unable to reproduce any but the very faintest outlines, and yet these were the traits which, pervaded all my friend's stories and gave them character and distinctiveness.

      Many of the other characters in this tale were drawn from the life, with such changes added and omitted features as might rescue them from any charge of personality. With all my care on this