Kenelm Chillingly, Book 6.
lm gave her a brief direction about his portmanteau, and then passed into the back parlour, where her husband was employed on his baskets,-with the baby's cradle in the corner, and
dear old mother beside him, reading the tract which linked her dreams of life eternal with life just o
nd mother too, do not pray that some day or other you may be as happy. By and by the
ou will know some day: pass it by now. To return to the point: you are happy; if I asked w
h, begging your pardon, I think it
ppiness never yet found any words that could
d ailing all his life,-put, too, by a man of the rarest conformation of physical powers that nature can adapt to physical enjoyment,-a man who, since the age in which memory commences, had never known what it was to be unwell, who could scarcely understand you if you talked of a finger-ache, and whom those refinements of mental culture which multiply the delights of the senses had endowed with the m
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