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THE STRANGER'S X.AIR. 259
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XXXV.—THE STRANGER'S LAIR.
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tt «3». The Steeped fed- in roofe sun d ...
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.
40o The Chester And Hereford Railway Pas...
she the sister and tlie friend . So she , having wept some faithful throug and tears over h travels the words shadows with which Miss of Mary her Curwen many Cresset down sorrowed wrote to in Coalbrookdale life London , wishes rooms to . see There , her and ,
so meeting it were , Mrs the certain . great Egerton day statist in write , the there s ensuing to forming Mary week to a little say her , that plot husband with of visitation her , herself leave , as , ,
upon and a few a friendswill drive over and spend , the evening . and So here tea is set this forth sweet , on evening a bowery the grass aged -p lad lot y by Ly the dia , river and ' the s brink child ,
snowiest await the on gue her sts . spotless Very neat lace . , is Sir Mary Rob in ert her Murson , best silk being gown in , her the cap
neihbourhood , comes too . So here the visitors Hud her , and here g they Miss talk Curwen , and here is full the of evening her own wears scheme away ; the . rest are for self-help
rather the experience lan than which of charity a will literary . foster And woman as self she -respect ' s l speaks ife , as and she who aid pleads has independence had strenuousl the deepest , y tears for
p music come The unbidden rushes summer by breeze to many the blows scent eyes . from gently garden , the little flowers river , with from its woodland eternal
indeed fern , from , and copse so the and , ni brake ght comes upon the gentl wind y . time -swept I know is ri hills not for , is whether it very whether sweet the
result discussion is far will or bear near fruit . , I whether only know the that the pe world is , full of harmonieshallowed sympathies and solemn truths , which we are
, evoking as our knowledge grows .
The Stranger's X.Air. 259
THE STRANGER ' S X _. AIR . 259
Xxxv.—The Stranger's Lair.
XXXV . —THE STRANGER ' S LAIR .
Tt «3». The Steeped Fed- In Roofe Sun D ...
tt _« 3 _» . The Steeped fed- in roofe sun d shine houses the looked village more lay , than warm ; into the
The waves whose ran shore the tiny children bay , swarm And At W Down hom play kissing on da with ily and miracles the lapp great ing keep sea their running from little harms to bare meet , feet , ,,
, Tempting them into Ms treacherous arms . On Brig the hter gil th ded an vane elsewh , on ere the f th t e clo he sun ck s l hine in the streamed tower d lea ,
Of the grey old church ovlage , angm Ah On the ! when hands shall just the met cycles at the of no change on-tide comp hour le . te the fulfil
" T In When heir shadowless rounds time and , and light eternity at perfect one , good gaol day and shall ill meet , , ?
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Citation
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English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), June 1, 1858, page 259, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_01061858/page/43/
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