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284 CABOIiiNE FRANCES CORNWALLIS.
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.
Known The W Ill Be Name , 6 T I Ha Who T...
language into Zolgog specified , " , including and even districts - a a map Faun , a of a grammar and the Flora country and , d in , duly vocabulary with which portioned the a scientific strictest of out the
precision nomenclature in all was its invented details . and The few arrange specimens given of these juvenile writings read rather like the jeux _< than _Tesprit the of some
mature author caricaturing graver works , mere offspring of a child ' s fancy . to whomh
she When was seven she was about older sixteen than , herself her sister she , had been , tenderl thoug y attachedmarried years leaving her companionless , ; and the mere
was sadness turned , of the into sep , the aration deep in sorrow the course of entire of a bereavement few month the s ;
young for a few ere wife she s died after had , . leaving comp In the leted behind midst a her year of this an of infant affliction wedded , who her life also fa , died ther
injure mother d year too his fell leg into , and for bad six state month of heal s was th . hel Long pless afterwards , and her
in said describing the first the time effects the a famil of this were accumulation able to appear of trials at church , she , j y
changed together appearance again , the the parishioners pale worn almost shadows wept of to their see former their
selves It is . not uncommon , for a ardent mind to feel utterly I young
and crushed rejectin by the g all first minor heavy and consolations affliction find stern that that befals sort may of it remain in enj early , to ent years hug in , I 1 E
sorrow to its hearta oym dedicating case when reli itself ion to a assumin , life of endurance the ascetic . form Especiall paints y is the this world the I 1
most as a mere avoid scene Thu g of , temp it tation with g , Miss which Cornwallis they are , most and blest with who like I 1
fervour to . that s which was sends the sorrowing ; young Roman 1 Catholic to the cloistershe devoted herself with entire I
vow self-abnegation to resign all to domestic the father ordinary , observances all p that leasures he , and had of taking lost youth in a , s others soug olemn ht I i I
onl She y to walked supply onl to her when he walkedrode when he rode , . 1 stayed within when y he could do of neither mental , , kept his accounts that he , B m
restrained all outward appearance suffering mi amusem ght not ent be dress vexed society at the and sight gave of herself her tears wholl ; she y to abjured duty , M m
life till human her tired , nature spirit , , often weary longed ing , as to it inevitabl lay down y a must burden of such which a H M
h she ers , felt elf one almost of the too heavy readiest to to be pronounce borne . In th after at " years this was she of was not H H
the strong reli and gion noble of Christ soul ; ; " and but thoug if an h t error he in , jury it was it caused the error to her a | H i m
284 Caboiiine Frances Cornwallis.
284 CABOIiiNE FRANCES CORNWALLIS .
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Citation
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English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), June 1, 1864, page 234, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_01061864/page/18/
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