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264 WEATHEE-BOUND.
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.
Which Among Like The A Sciences Certain ...
which so much lay indeed before th the at fire it , had evid infected ently on of the the soft very bes and t possible dog's and heads terms cats _^
with one another , a confused medley shaggy , ears For , tails a few and minutes outstretched the new paws comer . looked on silentllike a y
man much in love with , some picture , indeed till Josep , h had asked the second time for the latest news from London .
Oncewere set going just , touched the talk upon went and on briskl no more y enoug ; perhaps h There . Party the stranger politics lack
of mig other ht have top had ics between enough of host them and elsewh guest ere ; . the French was no king ' s projects abroad ; the troubles in Scotland ; the campaign in the
tions Low le Countries about and Bentley the . great And which Josep controversy h had was shaken eager then to out at ask full such a hundred rage a storm between ques of
pamp Boy hlets upon the , learned world . Nay , had our parson been less modesthis guest might have learnt how he himself had
drawn pen , on the side of his beloved ancients , though by the more way without of the li the ht than faintest came hop to e it that throug his h thesis the key would -hole ever of one see
of the carved g chests . All that evening , the two men sat different talking , ; each the stranger well pleased with with his indolence wh the ite other lordl in , y and hands yet attitude , so with widel gra the y -
other cious air deferential , with a , yet high sturd -bred y , wearing the marks every of his patient ; dailtoilboth in face and figurethose large brown hands
busil So y y reelin , evening g yarn whil the burr e their of own the er , inning quoted -wheels the classics broug . ht our
every sp usual traveller one into day , the he was kitchen greeted for a with week the or n more ews , , that till , , entering though the as certainlclear
before weather morning looked , unpromising for the peewits as ever were , it at would play again , and y the it seemed
hurried impossible on mist the was dark lifting to sky the with line off guest the . a crowd Some hills as , . going littl of A e fine tim to the day e hts he window to stood -morrow th , he ere ! lo in , his oked ite min out of d thougsuggested sp
himself away by the contrast between the scene out-of-doors and within leng that th just , , smothering this around still him warm down ; all these atmosp that wil h here alf d riot -formed of of hou the fancies s elements ehold with love without a . sig At h ;
thoug history the the accustomed stranger h , . both It was of turned gentl chair easil e , y hastil blood asked told . y Josep had from A young perished h the somewhat coup window together le , without , abruptl and in as the y fortune he for great took his , ,
p his lague father . They 's cousin left . Josep The boy h , , then proved a mere of a infant studious , to turn the ; care in due of time became a servitor at Oxfordand was appointedafter
, ,
264 Weathee-Bound.
264 WEATHEE-BOUND .
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Citation
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English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), Dec. 1, 1863, page 264, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_01121863/page/48/
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