Falkland, Book 3. by Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton
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page 1 of 23 (04%)
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FALKLAND
By Edward Bulwer-Lytton BOOK III. EXTRACTS FROM THE JOURNAL OF LADY EMILY MANDEVILLE. Friday.--Julia is here, and so kind! She has not mentioned his name, but she sighed so deeply when she saw my pale and sunken countenance, that I threw myself into her arms and cried like a child. We had no need of other explanation: those tears spoke at once my confession and my repentance. No letter from him for several days! Surely he is not ill! how miserable that thought makes me! Saturday.--A note has just been brought me from him. He is come back-here! Good heavens! how very imprudent! I am so agitated that I can write no more. Sunday.--I have seen him! Let me repeat that sentence--I have seen him. Oh that moment! did it not atone for all that I have suffered? I dare not write everything he said, but he wished me to fly with him--him--what happiness, yet what guilt, in the very thought! Oh! this foolish heart --would that it might break! I feel too well the sophistry of his arguments, and yet I cannot resist them. He seems to have thrown a spell over me, which precludes even the effort to escape. Monday.--Mr. Mandeville has asked several people in the country to dine here to-morrow, and there is to be a ball in the evening. Falkland is of |
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