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Leah Mordecai by Belle K. (Belle Kendrick) Abbott
page 50 of 235 (21%)
in its sea-girt place as usual, and all is quiet in the harbor. How
funny people have such strange dreams. But I fear the vision of that
smoking fortress and that angry harbor will not fade soon from my
memory; perhaps I have a taint of superstition in my nature. But I
must hasten, or I'll be late for the morning worship. I believe I'll
tell my uncle of my dream."






CHAPTER VIII.





THE month sped on. The end of Madam Truxton's year was rapidly
advancing. School-friendships that had grown and matured within the
seminary walls, now deepened and intensified as the day for final
separation approached. All were studying, with a zeal commendable
and necessary, too, for the final ordeal through which Madam
Truxton's pupils must necessarily pass.

Since that dark, gloomy day when Leah Mordecai acquainted Lizzie
Heartwell with some of the facts of her sad life, not a word further
had been spoken on the subject. But they had seemed bound to each
other by an indissoluble bond of love. No word harsher than a
caress, and no look sterner than a smile, had Lizzie ever cast upon
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