Mistress Dorothy Marvin Being Excerpta From the Memoirs of Sir Edward Armstrong

Cover Mistress Dorothy Marvin Being Excerpta From the Memoirs of Sir Edward Armstrong
Mistress Dorothy Marvin Being Excerpta From the Memoirs of Sir Edward Armstrong
Snaith, J. C. (John Collis), 1876-1936
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But it did not enter her head to question the source of this sudden malady. So away she ran to a place where the bank sloped downwards to the river's brim, and caught as much water as her hat and mine would carry. She plied this to my forehead with exquisite ten- derness, and ne'er ceased her anxieties or her careful task of restoration till I was on my legs again, and till she had satisfied herself that my recovery was effected.
Soon I left the manor and returned to the King's Head mis- erable
..., heart-torn, and quite tired of life. For days and weeks events had been slowly drifting towards one supreme crisis. It had now arrived ; this instinct told me more thoroughly than tome upon tome of clergy. A very little thing had sufficed to set my conscience and my sins one against the other in open warfare ; and they had now to fight the matter out between them. Thus I went back to Bridgwater with my mind already on the rack.
During that short journey it had a bitter foretaste of impend- ing tortures.


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