. Three Vassar girls in the Tyrol. Entry into Jerusalem 135 Gethsemane . 135 Ordering the Passover 136 Before Herod 137 IO ILL USTRA TIONS. Page The Crucifixion 138 Calvary 144 The Ascension 145 John 146 Barabbas 147 Gilbert Austin makes a Magnanimous Proposition 149 Tyrolese Headgear 152 Street-cleaning in Trent 153 Father Pacifico 154 Among the Mountains of the Tyrol . 159 Aunt Jane 167 In the Church at Botzen 168 Off for a Walk 170 A Tyrolese Mountaineer 181 Wanda 182 The Summit of the Ortler, from Franzens- hohe 183 Mine Host 186 Page Father Pacifico Again 188 Old Baths of Bormio 189 Arriv


. Three Vassar girls in the Tyrol. Entry into Jerusalem 135 Gethsemane . 135 Ordering the Passover 136 Before Herod 137 IO ILL USTRA TIONS. Page The Crucifixion 138 Calvary 144 The Ascension 145 John 146 Barabbas 147 Gilbert Austin makes a Magnanimous Proposition 149 Tyrolese Headgear 152 Street-cleaning in Trent 153 Father Pacifico 154 Among the Mountains of the Tyrol . 159 Aunt Jane 167 In the Church at Botzen 168 Off for a Walk 170 A Tyrolese Mountaineer 181 Wanda 182 The Summit of the Ortler, from Franzens- hohe 183 Mine Host 186 Page Father Pacifico Again 188 Old Baths of Bormio 189 Arrival at the Paverhutte Alte Sulden . 193 Guides 195 A Young Adler. 196 Way from the Paverhutte to the Ortler Spitz 197 The Ortler Spitz 201 The Storm in the Mountains . . 205 Judge Austin 210 Valerie 212 Bat! ,218 Mary , 222 Fisher Cottages at Frauenwbrth . 227 Kbnigssee 230 An Unexpected Meeting 232 She was perfectly self-possessedv . 233 John demoralized 237 THREE VASSAR GIRLS IN THE TYROL. CHAPTER I, THE THREE *§jj||g|yFgHEY were three friends at college, — or rather theyformed a triangle containing two friendships andtwo enmities. Valerie and Dorothy each lovedElsie, and were equally beloved by her; but Valerieand Dorothy were not friends. They were eachjealous of Elsies fondness for the other; andwhen Valerie opened her friends door and found Dorothy cozilyestablished in the great arm-chair, she invariably made a pretext ofhaving come to borrow a book or to inquire about a lesson, and thiserrand accomplished, hurried away. Dorothy felt the avoidance, andattributed it to scorn, whereas it was simply owing to Valeriessensitive dread of Dorothys sarcastic remarks. For Dorothy couldbe cruelly sarcastic in a perfectly well-bred way, barbing her shaftswith exaggerated politeness which caused her victim to bleed inwardlywhile it left no pretext for grievance. Dorothy could not explainvery clearly why she disliked Valerie, though Elsie had often chal-lenged her to sfive


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Keywords: ., bookauthorchampneyelizabethweli, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890