Book,  chapter

 1    1,    4|         if she will turn a deaf ear to the prayers of two children,
 2    1,   13|  prolonged howls broke on their ear, plainly not proceeding
 3    1,   13|     deafening noise fell on his ear like the roar of artillery.
 4    1,   14|        help would fall upon his ear. He ventured far up in spite
 5    1,   14|      being alone, straining his ear with painful eagerness to
 6    1,   14|      and knelt down and put his ear to the heart.~But a wilder
 7    1,   15|     however, caught Glenarvan’s ear as sounding like Spanish,
 8    1,   15|        Paganel, pricking up his ear.~“Yes, it’s clear enough
 9    1,   15| sonorous words that fell on his ear.~“If I dont catch the accent,”
10    1,   19|          sat up, and turned his ear toward the plain, listening
11    1,   22|        apparent to the eye, the ear could catch the sound of
12    1,   26|         DUNCAN!” broke upon his ear.~There she was, five miles
13    2,   11| information solely for Ayrton’s ear. The little procession now
14    2,   14|     fact, for there fell on his ear the sublime strains of Mozart’
15    2,   16|      when a neigh struck on his ear, and immediately after a
16    2,   18|     wagon, and bent a listening ear to the faintest sound. The
17    3,   12|         aroused, and he put his ear to the ground; it sounded
18    3,   12|        that seemed an hour, his ear intent, his eye peering
19    3,   19|        no sound whatever to our ear.”~“That’s true,” said Paganel. “
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License