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The Sea-Witch - Or, the African Quadroon : a Story of the Slave Coast by Maturin Murray Ballou
page 175 of 215 (81%)
have suitors from the city."

"Nay, my lord," replied the girl, showing a bracelet that clasped her
rounded left arm; "I belong to the abbey." And she cast so sad a look on
the good burgess that his heart sank within him.

"How is this?" he resumed,--and he touched the bracelet, whereon were
engraven the arms of the Abbey of St. Germain.

"My lord, I am the daughter of a serf. Thus, whoever should unite
himself to me in marriage would become a serf himself, were he a burgess
of Paris, and would belong, body and goods, to the abbey. For this
reason I am shunned by every one. But it is not this that saddens me--it
is the dread of being married to a serf by command of my lord abbot, to
perpetuate a race of slaves. Were I the fairest in the land, lovers
would avoid me like the plague."

"And how old are you, my dear?" asked the goldsmith.

"I know not, my lord," replied the girl; "but my lord abbot has it
written down."

This great misery touched the heart of the good man, who for a long time
had himself eaten the bread of misfortune. He conformed his pace to that
of the girl, and they moved in this way towards the river in perfect
silence. The burgess looked on her fair brow, her regal form, her dusty
but delicately-formed feet, and the sweet countenance which seemed the
true portrait of St. Genevieve, the patron saint of Paris.

"You have a fine cow," said the goldsmith.
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