The String of Pearls (1850), p. 273

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"Todd's?"
"Yes."
"Why not, Arabella? I feel, the moment that I leave this house, as though some irresistible fascination dragged me there, and I think I could no more pass down Fleet Street without directing my eyes to that building, which perchance has proved fatal to poor Mark, than I could fly."

TODD ALARMED AT STRANGE SOUNDS WHILST PACKING HIS PLUNDER.{Figure}

"But—but, I shrink from that man recognising us again."
"We will pass upon the other side of the way, Arabella; but do not say nay
to me, for pass I must."
There was such afrantic sort of earnestness in the manner in which Johanna urged this point, that Arabella no longer made any sort of opposition to it, and the two young girls soon arranged a time of meeting, when they would proceed

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nesvetr

plate 35. transcribed.