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Excerpt from Southennan, Vol. 2 of 3
Frenchman; but he calculated without a suia cient knowledge of the fond feelings by which she was animated, when he fancied, that the hopelessness of her unrequited attachment would extinguish its ardour. This made him patient. Day after day passed with him in jealous vigi lance; but the deportment of Mary was so often seemingly equivocal, though only dictated by the suggestions of feminine gaiety and juvenile playfulness, that, he could not always repress his persuasion that the Frenchman would ulti mately triumph. His confidant was Rizzio.
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