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| | "Ianthe's soul' |
 | | At any rate she had a bit to quote; and though in truth she did not understand the exact bearing of the image, she had so studied her gestures, and so modulated her voice, that she knew that she could be effective. |
 | | Though the passage about Ianthe's soul comes very early in the work, she was now quite familiar with the poem, and when, in after days, she spoke of it as a thing of beauty that she had made her own by long study, she actually did not know that she was lying. |
 | | As she grew older, however, she quickly became wiser, and was aware that in learning one passage of a poem, it is expedient to select one in the middle, or at the end. |
| www.princeton.edu /~batke/trollope/eustace/eust_21.html (3794 words) |
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