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         Donal Grant:     more books (36)
  1. Donal Grant, by George MacDonald by George MacDonald, 2010-07-06
  2. Donal Grant by George MacDonald, 2010-03-08
  3. Donal Grant (Webster's French Thesaurus Edition) by Icon Group, 2008-09-18
  4. Donal Grant, by George MacDonald by George MacDonald; Donal Grant, 2006-11-03
  5. Donal Grant by George MacDonald, 2010-07-28
  6. Donal Grant by George MacDonald, 1883-01-01
  7. Donal Grant by George MacDonald, 2010-01-01
  8. Donal Grant by George MacDonald, 2008-08-18
  9. Donal Grant by George MacDonald, 2010-09-10
  10. Donal Grant by George MacDonald, 1892-01-01
  11. Donal Grant by George MacDonald, 1883-01-01
  12. Donal Grant by George MacDonald, 2010-09-09
  13. Donal Grant - New Century Kindle Format by George MacDonald, 2010-03-07
  14. Donal Grant (Volume 2) by George Macdonald, 2010-03-14

1. Donal Grant By George MacDonald
Donal Grant by George MacDonald. Title Donal Grant. Author MacDonald,George (18241905). Print Other files available for Donal Grant. i
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Donal Grant by George MacDonald Title: Donal Grant Author: MacDonald, George (1824-1905) Print Basis: Language: English Rights: Public Domain Status: Quick conversion from HTML document CCEL Subjects: All; Fiction LC Call no: LC Subjects: Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Fiction in English Title Page Table of Contents Search: Other files available for Donal Grant i.htm Static HTML version (use if above links fail) donal_grant-pkg.zip html files for download
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2. George MacDonald : Donal Grant
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3. Donal Grant By George MacDonald
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Donal Grant by George MacDonald Title: Donal Grant Author: MacDonald, George (1824-1905) Print Basis: Language: English Rights: Public Domain Status: Quick conversion from HTML document CCEL Subjects: All; Fiction LC Call no: LC Subjects: Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Fiction in English Title Page Table of Contents Search: Other files available for Donal Grant i.htm Static HTML version (use if above links fail) donal_grant-pkg.zip html files for download
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4. Donal Grant (about)
About Donal Grant by. Title Donal Grant. Creator(s) MacDonald, George (18241905).Publisher Grand Rapids Christian Classics Ethereal Library.
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5. Donal Grant
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6. George MacDonald : Donal Grant : Chapter LXIX. The Sick-Chamber.
Donal Grant by George MacDonald. Tools and Options,
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Chapter LXIX. The Sick-Chamber. She was carried to her room and laid on her bed. The doctor requested Mrs. Brookes and Donal to remain, and dismissed the rest, then proceeded to examine her. There were no bones broken, he said, but she must be kept very quiet. The windows must be darkened, and she must if possible sleep. She gave Donal a faint smile, and a pitiful glance, but did not speak. As he was following the doctor from the room, she made a sign to Mrs. Brookes with her eyes that she wanted to speak to him. He came, and bent over to hear, for she spoke very feebly. "You will come and see me, Mr. Grant?" "I will, indeed, my lady." "Every day?" "Yes, most certainly," he replied. She smiled, and so dismissed him. He went with his heart full. A little way from the door stood Forgue, waiting for him to come out. He had sent the doctor to his father. Donal passed him with a bend of the head. He followed him to the schoolroom. "It is time this farce was over, Grant!" he said.

7. Donal Grant - Chapter XXXI
Donal Grant. by George MacDonald I will be Donal Grant, whether the coffee be cold or hot
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Donal Grant
by George MacDonald Terms Contents Chapter I Chapter II ... Chapter LXXXIV Chapter XXXI
Bewilderment.
is first thought was of a long and delightful journey he had made on horseback with the earlthrough scenes of entrancing interest and variety,with the present result of a strange weariness, almost misery. What had befallen him? Was the thing a fact or a fancy? If a fancy, how was he so weary? If a fact, how could it have been? Had he in any way been the earl's companion through such a long night as it seemed? Could they have visited all the places whose remembrance lingered in his brain? He was so confused, so bewildered, so haunted with a shadowy uneasiness almost like remorse, that he even dreaded the discovery of the cause of it all. Might a man so lose hold of himself as to be no more certain he had ever possessed or could ever possess himself again? He bethought himself at last that he might perhaps have taken more wine than his head could stand. Yet he remembered leaving his glass unemptied to follow the earl; and it was some time after that before the change came! Could it have been drunkenness? Had it been slowly coming without his knowing it? He could hardly believe it? But whatever it was, it had left him unhappy, almost ashamed. What would the earl think of him? He must have concluded him unfit any longer to keep charge of his son! For his own part he did not feel he was to blame, but rather that an accident had befallen him. Whence then this sense of something akin to shame? Why should he be ashamed of anything coming upon him from without? Of that shame he had to be ashamed, as of a lack of faith in God! Would God leave his creature who trusted in him at the mercy of a chanceof a glass of wine taken in ignorance? There was a thing to be ashamed of, and with good cause!

8. Donal Grant By George MacDonald
Donal Grant by George MacDonald What one reviewer said about a href=detail.asp?ASIN=B000051XAU DonalGrant /a br I have just finished this book and I do
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9. Donal Grant, By George MacDonald By George MacDonald
Free download of the Project Gutenberg eBook Donal Grant, by George MacDonald by George MacDonald
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10. George MacDonald
1865) * Annals of a Quiet Neighbourhood (1866) * Robert Falconer (1868) * Malcolm(1875) * The Marquis of Lossie (1877) * Donal Grant (1883) * Lilith (1895).
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11. Donal Grant - Chapter LVIII
'Papa is very ill today, Simmons tells me ' said Davie, as Donal entered the schoolroom. 'He says he has never seen him so ill. Oh, Mr. Grant, I hope he is not going to die!' 'I hope not ' Donal
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Donal Grant
by George MacDonald Terms Contents Chapter I Chapter II ... Chapter LXXXIV Chapter LVIII
A Soul Diseased.
apa is very ill to-day, Simmons tells me," said Davie, as Donal entered the schoolroom. "He says he has never seen him so ill. Oh, Mr. Grant, I hope he is not going to die!" "I hope not," returned Donalnot very sure, he saw when he thought about it, what he meant; for if there was so little hope of his becoming a true man on this side of some awful doom, why should he hope for his life here? "I wish you would talk to him as you do to me, Mr. Grant!" resumed Davie, who thought what had been good for himself must be good for everybody. Of late the boy had been more than usual with his father, and he may have dropped some word that turned his father's thoughts toward Donal and his ways of thinking: however weak the earl's will, and however dull his conscience, his mind was far from being inactive. In the afternoon the butler brought a message that his lordship would be glad to see Mr. Grant when school was over. Donal found the earl very weak, but more like a live man, he thought, than he had yet seen him. He pointed to a seat, and began to talk in a way that considerably astonished the tutor.

12. Project Gutenberg Edition Of Donal Grant
Project Gutenberg Presents. Donal Grant. by George MacDonald. ProjectGutenberg Release 2433 (December 2000) Author names above are
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13. Donal Grant By George MacDonald - A Complete EBook In Pages (61 / 547)
Next Page Donal Grant by George MacDonald. Book, page 61 / 547 the glorious ascent climbed the serving man, suggesting to Donal's. eye the crawling of an insect, to his heart
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up out of sight, with plain promise of endless convolutions beyond.
It was of ancient stone, but not worn as would have been a narrow
stair. A great rope of silk, a modern addition, ran up along the
wall for a hand-rail; and with slow-moving withered hand upon it, up
the glorious ascent climbed the serving man, suggesting to Donal's
eye the crawling of an insect, to his heart the redemption of the
sons of God.
With the stair yet ascending above them as if it would never stop, the man paused upon a step no broader than the rest, and opening a door in the round of the well, said, "Mr. Grant, my lord," and stood aside for Donal to enter. He found himself in the presence of a tall, bowed man, with a large-featured white face, thin and worn, and a deep-sunken eye that gleamed with an unhealthy life. His hair was thin, but covered his head, and was only streaked with gray. His hands were long and thin

14. Donal Grant By George MacDonald
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Please select a format Plucker iSilo iSiloX . Doc Rocketbook . zTXT . PDF PalmReader . Read online (482 pages) Random excerpt: ad but seated himself when a woman came to the door of the cottage, looked at him for a moment, and probably thinking him, from his bare feet, poorer than he was, said "Wad ye like a drink?" "Ay, wad I," answered Donal, "a drink o' watter, gien ye please." "What for no milk?" asked the woman. "'Cause I'm able to pey for 't," answered Donal. "I want nae peyment," she rejoined, perceiving his drift as little as probably my reader. "An' I want nae milk," returned Donal. "Weel, ye may pey for 't gien ye like," she rejoined. "But I dinna like," replied Donal. "Weel, ye're a some queer customer!" she remarked. "I thank ye, but I'm nae customer, 'cep' for a drink o' watter," he persisted, looking in her face with a smile; "an' watter has aye been grĂ¢tis sin' the days o' Adam'cep' maybe i' toons i' the het pairts o' the warl'." The woman turned into the cottage, and came out again presently with a delft basin, holding about a pint, full of milk, yellow and rich.

15. Donal Grant By George MacDonald - A Complete EBook In Pages (51 / 547)
Next Page Donal Grant by George MacDonald. Book, page 51 / 547. Donal, in whom he had recognized the peasantscholar "this little
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Donal, in whom he had recognized the peasant-scholar: "this little
brother of mine reads all the dull old romances he can lay his hands
on."
"Perhaps," suggested Donal, "they are the only fictions within his
reach! Could you not turn him loose upon sir Walter Scott?"
"A good suggestion!" he answered, casting a keen glance at Donal.
"Will you let me look at the passage?" said Donal to the boy,
holding out his hand. The boy opened the book, and gave it him. On the top of the page Donal read, "The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia." He had read of the book, but had never seen it. "That's a grand book!" he said. "Horribly dreary," remarked the elder brother. The younger reached up, and laid his finger on the page next him. "There, sir!" he said; "that is the place: do tell me what it means." "I will try," answered Donal; "I may not he able." He began to read at the top of the page.

16. Donal Grant
Mystery, Suspense, History, Gothic, Literature, AntiSemitism
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17. George MacDonald : Donal Grant : Chapter LXXXIV. Morven House.
Drama Classical. Authors Titles. Donal Grant. by George MacDonald I do not think the earl will last many days " said Donal. " It would be well, it seems to me, at
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Chapter LXXXIV. Morven House. In the evening Donal went again to the home-farm. Finding himself alone in the drawing-room, he walked out into the old garden. "Thank God," he said to himself, "if my wife should come here some sad, sweet night, with a low moon-crescent, and a gently thinking wind, and wander about the garden, it will not be to know herself forgotten!" He went up and down the grassy paths. Once again, all as long agofor it seemed long nowhe was joined by Miss Graeme. "I couldn't help fancying," she said as she came up to him, "that I saw lady Arctura walking by your side.God forgive me! how could I be so heartless as mention her!" "Her name will always be pleasant in my ears," returned Donal. "I was thinking of herthat was how you felt as if you saw her! You did not really see anything, did you?" "Oh

18. Blackmask Online : SUGGEST "Donal Grant" TO A FRIEND...
He had not gone far when he found himself on a wide moor.......SUGGEST Donal Grant TO A FRIEND Book Title Donal Grant. Location CLICK HERE.
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19. MacDonald (1990) Donal Grant
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20. Donal Grant - Chapter I
Donal Grant was descending a path on a hillside to the valley belowa sheeptrackof which he knew every winding as well as any boy his half-mile to and from
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Donal Grant
by George MacDonald Terms Contents Chapter I Chapter II ... Chapter LXXXIV Chapter I
Foot-Faring.
t was a lovely morning in the first of summer. Donal Grant was descending a path on a hillside to the valley belowa sheep-track of which he knew every winding as well as any boy his half-mile to and from school. But he had never before gone down the hill with the feeling that he was not about to go up again. He was on his way to pastures very new, and in the distance only negatively inviting. But his heart was too full to be troublednor was his a heart to harbour a care, the next thing to an evil spirit, though not quite so bad; for one care may drive out another, while one devil is sure to bring in another. A great billowy waste of mountains lay beyond him, amongst which played the shadow at their games of hide and seekgraciously merry in the eyes of the happy man, but sadly solemn in the eyes of him in whose heart the dreary thoughts of the past are at a like game. Behind Donal lay a world of dreams into which he dared not turn and look, yet from which he could scarce avert his eyes. "It's time," he said to himself, when he found he was stepping gingerly, "I ga'e my feet a turn at the auld accomplishment. It's a pity to grow nae so fit for onything suner nor ye need. I wad like to lie doon at last wi' hard soles!"

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