The String of Pearls (1850), p. 689

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nesvetr at May 26, 2016 07:30 PM

The String of Pearls (1850), p. 689


wait here until daylight. That would be destruction. What is to become of me?"
He came round the sides of the barge with the hope that some wherry had been moored to it, but he found that that hope was a fallacious one indeed. There was the gloomy-looking vessel moored far out in the stream, with him as its only passenger.


THE POLICE-GALLEY CHASING TODD TO GRAVESEND.
{Figure}

Any one without Todd's load of guilt upon his soul, and upon better terms with human nature, could soon have got assistance, for the distance from the shore was by no means so great but that his voice must have been heard had he chosen to exert it; but that would not do for him. He dreaded that his presence upon the barge should be known, and yet he alike dreaded that the morning's light should come shiningly upon him, without any boat coming to take him off.

THE STRING 0E PEARLS.

689

wait here until daylight. That would be destruction. What is to become
of me?"

^He came round the sides of the barge with the hope that some wherry had
been moored to it, but he found that that hope was a fallacious one indeed.
There was the gloomy-looking vessel moored far out in the stream, with him as its
only passenger.

THE POLICE-GALLEY CHASING TODD TO GRAVESEKD,

Any one without Todd's load of guilt upon his soul, and upon better terms
with human nature, could soon have got assistance, for the distance from tne
shore was by no means so great but that his voice must have been heard had he
chosen to exert it ; bat that would not do for him. He dreaded _tha his .pre-
sence upon the barge should be known, and yet he alike dreaded that the morn-
ing's light should come shiningly upon him, without any boat coming to take
him off.

No 87.