Page:Collingwood - Life and Letters of Lewis Carroll.djvu/148

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124
THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF

room, and returned in a minute with—a large clothes-brush. On this Liddon tried a further and more energetic demonstration; he took off his coat, and laid it at her feet, pointed downwards (to intimate that in the lower regions was the object of his desire), smiled with an expression of the joy and gratitude with which he would receive it, and put the coat on again. Once more a gleam of intelligence lighted up the

Instance of hieroglyphic writing of the date MDCCCLXVII Interpretation. "There is a coat here, left in the care of a Ruſsian peasant, which I should be glad to receive from him"
Instance of hieroglyphic writing of the date MDCCCLXVII Interpretation. "There is a coat here, left in the care of a Ruſsian peasant, which I should be glad to receive from him"
Instance of hieroglyphic writing of the date MDCCCLXVII

Interpretation. "There is a coat here, left in the care of a Ruſsian peasant, which I should be glad to receive from him"

plain but expressive features of the young person; she was absent much longer this time, and when she returned, she brought, to our dismay, a large cushion and a pillow, and began to prepare the sofa for the nap that she now saw clearly was the thing the dumb gentleman wanted. A happy thought occurred to me, and I hastily drew a sketch representing Liddon, with one coat on, receiving a second and larger one from the hands of a benignant Russian peasant.