[The Last of the Foresters by John Esten Cooke]@TWC D-Link book
The Last of the Foresters

CHAPTER XXVIII
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As we have said, the young man had received the letter with a radiant flush, and a brilliant flash of his fine eye; and thus the reader will easily comprehend, when we inform him, that Verty imagined the letter to be from Redbud.

Redbud was his one thought, the only image in his mind, and Roundjacket's words, "post-mark, the Bower of Nature," had overwhelmed him with the blissful expectation of a note from Redbud, with loving words of explanation in it, recalling him, making him once more happy.

He tore open the letter, which was simply directed to "Mr.Verty, at Judge Rushton's office," and found his dream dispelled.

Alas! the name, at the foot of the manuscript, was not "Redbud"-- it was "Sallianna!" And so, when the young man's hopes were overturned, the bright flash of his clear eye was veiled in mist again, and his hand fell, with a gesture of discouragement, which Roundjacket found no difficulty in understanding.
Verty's face drooped upon his hand, and with the other hand, which held the letter, hanging down at the side of his chair, he sighed profoundly.

He remained thus, buried in thought, for some time, Roundjacket gazing at him in silence.


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