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TUB WANSTEAD INFANT ORPHAN ASYLUM. 1 5
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XXIX.—A DAY AT THE WANSTEAD INFANT
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_ ¦aifii i i r Snaresbrook On one of the...
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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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.
Mm P Part Ii. Chapter Iii. To Doraarthur...
** I have brought you this little remembrance of me , Miss Nugent , it I feared for my I sake mig . ht I not shall have be your time cousin to-morrow to-morrow to give . " it Her you . tone Wear was
bitter . " Thanksdear Miss Vernon , you are too generous / ' ( it was a
beautiful bracelet , which Miss Vernon was trying to clasp on her , arm , but her lingers shook too much to fasten it , ) " but are you
would satisfied " Neither and ? Are / I ' fear she you I said happy am ; so " ? weak but it is so too infatuated late , I , could that not I dare retract not if ask I
myself , whether I would if I could , . Never mind , I suppose I shall do like every one else . God bless you , do not say a word . " She
pressed marriage In the hex of little hand the village beautiful and left church her heiress . , all , decked Arthur out Powys with met _. flowers for the for first the
time his cousin . He would have affected a good deal of rapture at repelle seeing d her him , but . He there felt was , as something he always in had her done calm , that serious he counterfeits face could which not
were " poser useless " in . that Dora presence was _gravel . He y polite was , known and he , was and forced all to be the same
As . Dora stood a little on one side with her pupils , while the procession t to the village altarshe could not help
gay swepup , thinking ancehere of were the hollowness two of all le worldl of great y seeming personal . g To ifts all , both appear very - young peop
clever , and both possessed of high social position , yet she knew that the , cloud no bithan a man's hand , but which would soon
darken into storms gger was in the heart of the bride , and that the canker of a want of , steadfast principle , and of a selfish hard heart ,
was gnawing at the root of the bridegroom ' s apparently lofty gifts and distinguished endowments .
( To he concluded in our next . )
Tub Wanstead Infant Orphan Asylum. 1 5
TUB WANSTEAD INFANT ORPHAN ASYLUM . 1 5
Xxix.—A Day At The Wanstead Infant
XXIX . —A DAY AT THE WANSTEAD INFANT OKPHAN ASYLUM .
_ ¦Aifii I I R Snaresbrook On One Of The...
_ ¦ _aifii i i r Snaresbrook On one of the Station brightest when days three in minutes December walk last broug , we arrived ht us at to the the
until lod our ge car it gate d led of of us admission the to the Wanstead , hall , we door Infant were , which directed Orphan was to Asy follow opened lum . the by On broad a producing cheerful walk
lo go oking wn ; we damsel wrote , neatl our y name arrayed in the in visitors white cap ' book and while apron she , and went black to
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Citation
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English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), May 1, 1859, page 185, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_01051859/page/41/
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