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Baruch was now in love He had fallen in love with Clara suddenly

and totally His tendency to reflectiveness did not dihts

are here and there continually are not the people to feel the full

force of love Those who do feel it are those who are accusto at a ti time

'No man,' said Baruch once, 'can love a woly replied the Gentile, 'that no ht,' said Baruch, 'and so are

you' But Baruch looked in the glass: his hair, jet black when he was a

youth, was ht came to him--

this time with peculiar force--that he could not now expect a woht to demand that he should love, and

that he ed to call upon Barnes in about

a fortnight's time He still read Hebrew, and he had seen in the

shop a copy of the Hebrew translation of the Moreh Nevochireatly coveted, but could not afford to buy

Like every true book-lover, he could not make up his mind when he

wished for a book which was beyond his ht once for

all to renounce it, and he was guilty of subterfuges quite unworthy