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The Autobiography Of A Five-Pound Note (1853) (Paperback)
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The Autobiography Of A Five-Pound Note (1853) (Paperback)
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for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book:
CHAPTER III. Pebhaps it was six weeks after the events I have last
recorded, when very early one spring morning, Alfred hastily opened
the drawer which had been my weary abode for so long a period. He
snatched me up, and put me into a purse I had never been in a purse
before, and this was a very pretty one, made of green and amber
silk, with gold tassels and rings; and, the moment I came in
contact with it, I knew that it was a present from his sister
Marion, and had been netted by her little fingers. The stray gold
and silver that lay in the drawer were also gathered up, and put
into the other end of the purse, which Alfred then laid on the
table, while he proceeded to select different letters and papers
from the aforesaid drawer. There was a look of calm determination
in his face, which I had never seen imprinted there before. His
brows were contracted, and his lips firmly compressed; and I saw
that he was fully resolved on some decided act. I also saw that
this resolve had been arrived at through a painful process of doubt
and deliberation; and that the moment of decision had been hastened
by some very taunting expressions from Ifr. Griffin. All Alfred's
hesitation had vanished then; and all misgivings ofconscience on
his mother's account were absorbed in feelings of indignation and
wounded pride. His present life was not to be endured. Rapidly he
selected all Mrs. Selwyn's and Marion's letters; and, with a look
of tearful affection, placed them in a pocket-book which he
consigned to a portmanteau which lay open on the floor. In this he
also packed the best articles of his wardrobe, and then sat down to
write a farewell letter to his mother. I watched his pen, and I
knew every word that it inscribed; and much was I affected by the
expressions of penitence and lov...
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