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A MARTYRDOM, 177
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XXII.—A MARTYRDOM.
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-#* I was close to the door of the brown...
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Transcript
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Ny» In Its Ancient And More General Sens...
nals , tliat there are now , and likely to be for years , plenty of openings for good engravers—that unskilled labour is of no value in
the literary market—that it is necessary to bestow a certain amount of close application upon whatever branch of art may be taken in
hand as a profession—that this training may be received , and this lication bestowedat this Government School , * which we now
confidentl app y recommend , to the notice of parents , especially those having young daughters dependent on them for subsistence , to
whom we would earnestly suggest the advantages of apprenticing girls to so lucrative a profession .
M . S . E _,
A Martyrdom, 177
A MARTYRDOM , 177
Xxii.—A Martyrdom.
XXII . —A MARTYRDOM . A Fragment upon the Martyrdom of that youngest of the Saints , the young Master of Wardour : by that poor Servant of his father ' s house , Patience Morley , 7 th May , 1679 .
-#* I Was Close To The Door Of The Brown...
- _# _* I was close to the door of the brown parlourwhen I suddenly came
, upon Mistress Faith , whose looks were sad but serene . " Oh , dear Mistress Faith ! " cried Icatching at her dress and drawing her
this aside worth , " what man has your of God honoured on , his mother out decided of the to reach do , in of order the Mali to set gway
nants ? " " y There is a pass known to few , good Patience , " answered safe lacewhere chosen number will
she " which leadeth to a p , a is keep knows , him close . foot I may of not the tell thee even more were , but he blindfold Arthur , young . It cannot as he every pass
be , undertaken until night favours , us : by to-morrow ' s dawn , please him afe to the hillthat chosen
GodArthur will have seen s-country , , vessel of mighty things to come . We may not refuse to put our hands to the work when callednor hinder others doing so : but , oh
Patience ! would it were to-morrow , , and noon , when I trust we . have our Arthur back and safe _-with us ! " " Oh , Mistress
may Faith ! " exclaimed I , bursting into tears , " how can your honoured mother have decided to send that dear child on so dangerous an
errand ? " " My mother has many and weighty reasons which bear this decision in on her mind . For one thing , so young a person as
Arthur will be less suspected . Indeed , my beloved mother has ri Mist ghtl ress y determined Faith ! " repeated : I am quite I , in an convinced agony of now appreh . " " ension Mistress , < c do Faith you ,
* ¦ All communications to be addressed to Henry Cole , Esq ., Head Master ' s Office , Cromwell GardensSouth Kensington , S . W .
, VOL . I . 0
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Citation
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English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), May 1, 1858, page 177, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_01051858/page/33/
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