Homeward Bound - or, the Chase by James Fenimore Cooper
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page 8 of 613 (01%)
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masters of as many different states, besides the touch of the guitar by a
Spaniard; Greek by a German; the living tongues by the European powers, and philosophy by seeing the world; and now with a brain full of learning, fingers full of touches, eyes full of tints, and a person full of grace, your father is taking you back to America, to 'waste your sweetness on the desert air.'" "Poetically expressed, if not justly imagined, cousin Jack," returned the laughing Eve; "but you have forgot to add, and a heart full of feeling for the land of my birth." "We shall see, in the end." "In the end, as in the beginning, now and for evermore." "All love is eternal in the commencement." "Do you make no allowance for the constancy of woman? Think you that a girl of twenty can forget the country of her birth, the land of her forefathers--or, as you call it yourself when in a good humour, the land of liberty?" "A pretty specimen _you_ will have of its liberty!" returned the cousin sarcastically. "After having passed a girlhood of wholesome restraint in the rational society of Europe, you are about to return home to the slavery of American female life, just as you are about to be married!" "Married! Mr. Effingham?" "I suppose the catastrophe will arrive, sooner or later, and it is more |
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