. In the forest of Arden. he beginning, therefore, thatthe Forest is given over entirely to Pft .Tlt TO # 27 w/MJWifiWiiiifmnoMi m mr^i I m WMT )i lff\ ,i, i outlaws; those who have committed [^some grave offence against the worldof conventions, or who have voluntarilygone into exile out of sheer liking for afreer life. These persons are not vulgarlaw-breakers; they have neither blood \ on their hands nor ill-gotten gains in * their pockets; they are, on the contrary,people of uncommonly honest bearingand frank speech. Their offences evi-dently impose small burden on theirconscience, and they
. In the forest of Arden. he beginning, therefore, thatthe Forest is given over entirely to Pft .Tlt TO # 27 w/MJWifiWiiiifmnoMi m mr^i I m WMT )i lff\ ,i, i outlaws; those who have committed [^some grave offence against the worldof conventions, or who have voluntarilygone into exile out of sheer liking for afreer life. These persons are not vulgarlaw-breakers; they have neither blood \ on their hands nor ill-gotten gains in * their pockets; they are, on the contrary,people of uncommonly honest bearingand frank speech. Their offences evi-dently impose small burden on theirconscience, and they have the air ofthose who have never known what it is to have the Furies on one^s track. Rosalind was struck with the charmingnaturalness and gaiety of every one , we met in our first ramble on thatdelicious and never-to-be-forgotten morn-ing when we arrived in Arden. Therewas neither assumption nor diffidence; there was rather an entire absence ofany kind of self-consciousness. Rosa-lind had fancied that we might be quite. U M m
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Keywords: ., bookauthormabieham, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookyear1903