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  1. 27 de jul. de 2018 · The Wanderer; or, Female Difficulties (Volume 1 of 5) by. Fanny Burney. Topics. Refugees -- Fiction, France -- History -- Revolution, 1789-1799 -- Refugees -- Fiction, War stories, PR, Historical fiction. Publisher.

  2. 15 de set. de 2011 · 73,487 free eBooks. 19 by Fanny Burney. The Wanderer; or, Female Difficulties (Volume 1 of 5) by Fanny Burney. Read now or download (free!) Similar Books. Readers also downloaded… About this eBook. Free kindle book and epub digitized and proofread by volunteers.

    • Frances Burney
    • 1814
    • Volume I
    • Chapter I
    • Chapter II
    • Chapter III
    • Chapter IV
    • Chapter V
    • Chapter Vi

    CHAPTER I CHAPTER II CHAPTER III CHAPTER IV CHAPTER V CHAPTER VI CHAPTER VII CHAPTER VIII CHAPTER IX CHAPTER X CHAPTER XI CHAPTER XII CHAPTER XIII CHAPTER XIV CHAPTER XV CHAPTER XVI CHAPTER XVII CHAPTER XVIII CHAPTER XIX [Pg xvii] TO DOCTOR BURNEY, FRS and correspondent to the institute of France The earliest pride of my heart was to inscribe to my...

    During the dire reign of the terrific Robespierre, and in the dead ofnight, braving the cold, the darkness and the damps of December, someEnglish passengers, in a small vessel, were preparing to glide silentlyfrom the coast of France, when a voice of keen distress resounded fromthe shore, imploring, in the French language, pity and admission. The p...

    Upon reaching the British shore, while Mrs Maple, her niece, the elderlylady, and two maid-servants, claimed and employed the aid of thegentlemen, the Incognita, disregarding an offer of Harleigh to returnfor her, darted forward with such eagerness, that she was the first totouch the land, where, with a fervour that seemed resistless, sherapturousl...

    The Admiral immediately repaired to the stranger. 'Young woman,' hecried, 'I hope you don't take it into your mind, that I was moredisposed to serve you while I thought you of foreign culture, than now Iknow you to be of our own growth? If I came forwarder then, it was onlybecause I was afraid that those who have had less occasion than I havehad, t...

    The good understanding with which the eagerness of curiosity on oneside, and the subjection of caution on the other, made the travellersbegin their journey, was of too frail a nature to be of long endurance.'Tis only what is natural that flows without some stimulus; what isfactitious prospers but while freshly supplied with such materials asgave it...

    Upon the entrance of the travellers into London, the curiosity of MrsIreton was more than ever inflamed, to find that the journey, with allits delays, was at an end, before she had been able to gratify thatinsatiable passion in a single point. Yet every observation that shecould make tended to redouble its keenness. Neither ill humour norhaughtines...

    The affairs of Mrs Maple kept her a week longer in London; but theimpatience of the Wanderer to reach Brighthelmstone, was compelled toyield to an utter inability of getting thither unaided. During thisperiod, she gathered, from various circumstances, that Elinor had beenupon the point of marriage with the younger brother of Harleigh, ahandsome and...

  3. It holds, therefore, in its hands our best affections, it exercises our imaginations; it points out the path of honour; and gives to juvenile credulity knowledge of the world, without ruin, or...

  4. The Wanderer, Or, Female Difficulties. Set in England during the period of the French Revolution, The Wanderer chronicles the ordeals of an émigrée's escape from France and...