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to the sublimity of nature Her heart was not now affected, tears

of admiration did not start to her eyes, as when she viewed the vast

expanse of ocean, the grandeur of the heavens, and listened to the

rolling waters, and to the faint led

with their roar

Renificance Of the evening, which passed on without any particular incident, she

wished the conclusion, that she ht escape from the attentions of the

Count; and, as opposite qualities frequently attract each other in

our thoughts, thus Emily, when she looked on Count Morano, reh sometimes followed the recollection

Several weeks passed in the course of custo remarkable occurred Emily was amused by the manners and scenes

that surrounded her, so different from those of France, but where Count

Morano, too frequently for her coure and accoenerally admired,

Emily would, perhaps, have aded

from Valancourt, and had the Count forborne to persecute her with

officious attentions, during which she observed soainst whatever ood

in it