JEnone reproached herself for her suspicions. Surely she had done wrong in distrusting him for the coldness of his greeting. He may have meant nothing but love and kindness, and have been weighed down by cares and anxieties which she could not comprehend.... Ænone: A Tale of Slave Life in Rome - Page 42by Leonard Kip - 1867 - 308 pagesFull view - About this book
| American periodicals - 1864 - 740 pages
...cannot spare our time to give free scope to our love, as though we were poor and unknown.' ./Er.nnc reproached herself for her suspicions. Surely she...comedian, whose company his interest obliged him to toler392 393 ate! She would yet be patient and wait. 'And not only Spoletius, the historian, but also... | |
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