. Midsummer Eve : a fairy tale of loving and being loved . •■« Drawn by F. W. Hulme. Engnavcd by Joseph Williams. THE VISIT TO THE PART THE FOUETH. LONG and dangerous illness, of many months duration,confined Lady Elizabeth Talbot to the solitude of Ard-Flesk; and, much to her delight, Cormac, her beloved,but most wayward, son (instead of going abroad, asshe had, after much entreaty, consented he should),declared his desire to remain with her ; the opinionof Sidney was not asked: in all things he wasassumed to be the shadow of his cousin. Amarked change had come over these youths;each h


. Midsummer Eve : a fairy tale of loving and being loved . •■« Drawn by F. W. Hulme. Engnavcd by Joseph Williams. THE VISIT TO THE PART THE FOUETH. LONG and dangerous illness, of many months duration,confined Lady Elizabeth Talbot to the solitude of Ard-Flesk; and, much to her delight, Cormac, her beloved,but most wayward, son (instead of going abroad, asshe had, after much entreaty, consented he should),declared his desire to remain with her ; the opinionof Sidney was not asked: in all things he wasassumed to be the shadow of his cousin. Amarked change had come over these youths;each had grown distrustful of the other; their companion-ship had been of the closest kind; alike in person, connectedby blood, brought up together from earliest childhood—still, they never hadbeen friends; there was neither the bond nor the influence of sympathybetween them—nothing, at least, of that vital sympathy which not onlycreates, but continues to invigorate, true friendship. Tastes may differ—pursuits may be widely opposite—a thousand minor sensations, or evensentiments, may divide without separating—differences may ev


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookidmidsummereve, bookyear1870