Night and Morning, Volume 1 by Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton
page 24 of 147 (16%)
page 24 of 147 (16%)
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muttered.
"Ah! I remember: Jones, will you send for the parish register? It is somewhere in the vestry-room, I think--but nothing's kept properly. Better go yourself--'tis important." Mr. Jones nodded, and sallied forth. The register was not in the vestry; the church-wardens knew nothing about it; the clerk--a new clerk, who was also the sexton, and rather a wild fellow--had gone ten miles off to a wedding: every place was searched; till, at last, the book was found, amidst a heap of old magazines and dusty papers, in the parlour of Caleb himself. By the time it was brought to him, the sufferer was fast declining; with some difficulty his dim eye discovered the place where, amidst the clumsy pothooks of the parishioners, the large clear hand of the old friend, and the trembling characters of the bride, looked forth, distinguished. "Extract this for me, will you?" said Caleb. Mr. Jones obeyed. "Now, just write above the extract: "'Sir,--By Mr. Price's desire I send you the inclosed. He is too ill to write himself. But he bids me say that he has never been quite the same man since you left him; and that, if he should not get well again, still your kind letter has made him easier in his mind." Caleb stopped. "Go on." |
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