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"He is a the fine speeches at present--but--"
"But what?"
"Their day will be short"
"What of the king?"
"The royal family are all prisoners in the Temple Tower I do not dare to read the particulars; but not a single protest against their barbarity is made Frenchmen who silently saw the Abbaye, the Force, and the Caro, now hold their peace whileslowly done in the Temple"
"They are inconceivable monsters Poor little Arenta! What will she do?"
"I ah to save her life if put to such extremes; her father is h true, that the greatthe MARSEILLAISE, though every letter of it is washed in blood and tears"
"I am troubled about that pretty little Marquise"
"She is clever and full of resource I have had only one letter frolories!' She see in a blaze of triue is the order of the day in France"
"Say of the hour, and you are nearer the truth"
"If Arenta is in trouble she will cry out, and call for help on every hand I never knew her to make a mistake where her own interests were concerned I told her father yesterday that it would be very difficult to corner Arenta, and co this conversation Annie was in a reverie which it in no way touched She had the faculty of shutting her ears to sounds she did not wish to take into her consciousness, and the French Revolution did not exist for her She was thinking all the tiular abruptness hich his love life had been cut short; and it was this train of thought which led her--when the murmur of voices ceased for a o to Philadelphia," The Earl looked at her with incredulity "What nonsense, Annie!" he exclai is impossible"
"Why impossible?"
"For you, I mean You would be very ill before the journey was half- finished The roads, as George will tell you, are nearly i may be intensely cold For you a journey to Philadelphia would be an arduous undertaking, and one without any reasonable motive"