Transcribed from the 1895 Jarrold and Sons edition by DavidPrice, . Many thanks to Norfolk andNorwich Millennium Library, UK, for kindly allowing their copy tobe used for this transcription.
“This is the condition of humanity; we areplaced as it were in an intellectual twilight where we discoverbut few things clearly, and yet we see enough to tempt us withthe hope of making better and more discoveries.”
—BOLINGBROKE.
J Ewing Ritchie
Author of ‘East Anglia’
Vol 3
London: Jarrold and Sons
Warwick Lane E.C.
1895
CHAPTER |
| PAGE |
XXII. | AT THE CATTLE-SHOW | |
XXIII. | THE FUNERAL | |
XXIV. | THE HONEYMOON | |
XXV. | A REVELATION | |
XXVI. | THE ITALIAN COUNTESS | |
XXVII. | IN BRUSSELS | |
XXVIII. | A COUNTRYMAN IN TOWN | |
XXIX. | THE COLONEL | |
XXX. | ROSE RETIRES FROM THE STAGE | |
XXXI. | CHIEFLY ABOUT THE LAND | |
XXXII. | CONSULTATION | |
XXXIII. | THE FINAL RESOLVE |