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266 WEATHER-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 ...
he his The putting gracious parson such air ' s , and cheek home his flushed questions tones . of authority " ? Who _Xever mig ? ht mind B this y what ; man what ri be ght shame , with was
ever was in the truth ? so out the truth came . " Nay , such thoughts like trouble most others me little Onl now "— . just I have a shade had the them grave in voice past
years , . y They was faltering come of here gentle ; _" I blood grieve , but still my , at lads times will , over have my to ch live ildren go to .
p we loug do h now , and . their God willing sisters to , for service their . sake We , I cannot should always have desired as
the better Honest closet fortune Josep And . " h , now like he us had all , taken my reader it out , had quietl his y enoug skeleton hyet in
. , heart withal duced than in a with if way , as melodramatic you of his know own often which flourishes happens went , till the closer every skeleton to his bone had hearer of been it ' s
pro rattled some surpris again e . at Hebecca her husband 's wheel ; this stopped trouble ; she had lo been oked brooded up in
over so secretly that the good wife had never so much as guessed u Take at courage it . , " said the stranger , cheerily . 6 C You deserve will to
next where you a piece . that What you of good falls could should vacant fortune lay you b , I y say and shall for now depend your remember to a famil tolerable upon y ? my it , Ah living thi friends s ! be in sure Ireland come here the at ,
Bathlin A lance . " of astonishment and doubt passed between the
married g pair . Was Church patronage really in the power of much this incomprehensible they were burning stranger to ask , or but was then he onl how y jesting to put ? the So
their a question round guest -faced ? That talked damsel was good of no thirteen -naturedl easy matter . y , He to . was Phoebe For askin , a the g minute Phoebe eldest or if g she irl so , , and fine
would not love to come to Dublin , and see the park , ladies ing and " good gentlemen niht" . before walking Phoebe about . blushing And up there to her he was eyes ,
with say pleasure , had g found , any answer , . Already his hand was on the lie door left , when behind turning flashed round , a sense him . of One the painful minute sus the - upon
pense that two traveller into I am the stood able room undecided to , keep he exclaimed , the promise next , " Good , coming You peop hav back le e _^ pray the a word step believe or of
the Duke of Ormond for my it—the lord- . lieutenant of Ireland . " her He wheel was in gone a maz and e . had She shut would the have door been . Little puzzled Phoebe to tell sat the at all wonder and
meaning excitement of . those Phoeb las e t twitched words , and her yet thread she till felt it snapped , and
266 Weather-Bound.
266 WEATHER-BOUND .
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Citation
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English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), Dec. 1, 1863, page 266, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_01121863/page/50/
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