Wieland; or The Transformation, and Memoirs of Carwin, The Biloquist
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Published By Oxford University Press

9780199538775, 9780191921483

Author(s):  
Charles Brockden Brown
Keyword(s):  

[Written three years after the foregoing, and dated at Montpellier.*] I imagined that I had forever laid aside the pen; and that I should take up my abode in this part of the world, was of all events the least probable. My destiny...


Author(s):  
Charles Brockden Brown

Theodore Wieland, the prisoner at the bar, was now called upon for his defence. He looked around him for some time in silence, and with a mild countenance. At length he spoke: ‘It is strange; I am known to my judges and my auditors....


Author(s):  
Charles Brockden Brown

I had no inclination nor power to move from this spot. For more than an hour, my faculties and limbs seemed to be deprived of all activity. The door below creaked on its hinges, and steps ascended the stairs. My wandering and confused thoughts...


Author(s):  
Charles Brockden Brown

I will not enumerate the various inquiries and conjectures which these incidents occasioned. After all our efforts, we came no nearer to dispelling the mist in which they were involved; and time, instead of facilitating a solution, only accumulated our doubts. In the midst of...


Author(s):  
Charles Brockden Brown

Some time had elapsed when there happened another occurrence, still more remarkable. Pleyel, on his return from Europe, brought information of considerable importance to my brother. My ancestors were noble Saxons, and possessed large domains in Lusatia.* The Prussian wars had destroyed...


Author(s):  
Charles Brockden Brown

A few words more and I lay aside the pen for ever. Yet why should I not relinquish it now? All that I have said is preparatory to this scene, and my fingers, tremulous and cold as my heart, refuse any further exertion. This...


Author(s):  
Charles Brockden Brown

‘My morals will appear to you far from rigid, yet my conduct will fall short of your suspicions. I am now to confess actions less excusable, and yet surely they will not entitle me to the name of a desperate or sordid criminal.... ‘Your...


Author(s):  
Charles Brockden Brown

I had imperfectly recovered my strength, when I was informed of the arrival of my mother’s brother, Thomas Cambridge. Ten years since, he went to Europe, and was a surgeon in the British forces in Germany, during the whole of the late war. After...


Author(s):  
Charles Brockden Brown

I now come to the mention of a person with whose name the most turbulent sensations are connected. It is with a shuddering reluctance that I enter on the province of describing him. Now it is that I begin to perceive the difficulty of...


Author(s):  
Charles Brockden Brown
Keyword(s):  

Six years of uninterrupted happiness had rolled away, since my brother’s marriage. The sound of war had been heard, but it was at such a distance as to enhance our enjoyment by affording objects of comparison. The Indians were repulsed on the one side,...


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