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80 matches in All Departments
The balloon seemed scarcely to move, though it was slowly sinking
toward the ocean of white clouds which hung between it and the
earth. The two inmates of the car were insensible; their faces were
bloodless, their cheeks sunken. They were both young and handsome.
Harry Johnston, an American, was as dark and sallow as a Spaniard.
Charles Thorndyke, an English gentle-man, had yellow hair and
mustache, blue eyes and a fine intellectual face. Both were tall,
athletic in build and well-proportioned. Johnston was the first to
come to consciousness as the balloon sank into less rarefied
atmosphere. He opened his eyes dreamily and looked curiously at the
white face of his friend in his lap. Then he shook him and tried to
call his name, but his lips made no sound. Drawing himself up a
little with a hand on the edge of the basket, he reached for a
water-jug and sprinkled Thorndyke's face. In a moment he was
rewarded by seeing the eyes of the latter slowly open. "Where are
we?" asked Thorndyke in a whisper.
Inside the bank that June morning the clerks and accountants on
their high stools were bent over their ponderous ledgers, although
it was several minutes before the opening hour. The gray-stone
building was in Atlanta's most central part on a narrow street
paved with asphalt which sloped down from one of the main
thoroughfares to the section occupied by the old passenger depot,
the railway warehouses, and hotels of various grades. Considerable
noise, despite the closed windows and doors, came in from the
outside. Locomotive bells slowly swung and clanged; steam was
escaping; cabs, drays, and trucks rumbled and creaked along; there
was a whir of a street-sweeping machine turning a corner and the
shrill cries of newsboys selling the morning papers. Jarvis
Saunders, member of the firm of Mostyn, Saunders & Co., bankers
and brokers, came in; and, hanging his straw hat up, he seated
himself at his desk, which the negro porter had put in order.
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Dixie Hart (Hardcover)
N. Harben Will N. Harben, Will N Harben; Edited by 1stworld Library
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R689
Discovery Miles 6 890
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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In a blaze of splendor the morning sun broke over the mountain,
throwing its scraggy brown bowlders, spruce-pines, thorn-bushes,
and tangled vines into impenetrable shadow. Massed at the base and
along the rocky sides were mists as dense as clouds, through the
filmy upper edges of which the yellow light shone as through a
mighty prism, dancing on the dew-coated corn-blades, cotton-plants,
and already drinking from the fresh-ploughed, mellow soil of the
farm-lands which fell away in gentle undulations to the confines of
the village hard by. "A fellow couldn't ask for a prettier day than
this, no matter how greedy he was," Alfred Henley mused as he stood
in the doorway of his barn and heard the gnawing of the horses he
had just fed in the stalls behind him. A hundred yards distant, on
the main-travelled road which ran into the village of Chester, only
half a mile away, stood his house, the eight rooms of which were
divided into two equal parts by an open veranda, in which there was
a shelf for water-pails, tin wash-basins, and a towel on a clumsy
roller. A slender woman, with harsh, sharp features, older-looking
than her thirty years would have justified, and a stiff figure
disguised by few attempts at adornment, was sweeping the veranda
floor, and in chairs propped back against the weather-boarding sat
an old man and an old woman in the plainest of mountain attire.
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Mam' Linda (Paperback)
Will N Harben
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R625
R555
Discovery Miles 5 550
Save R70 (11%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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