Page:Taylor - In the Dwellings of the Wilderness.djvu/61

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CHAPTER III

Within the Tomb

By now the lamps had steadied to brighter burning, so that the tomb was thrown into the light. It was low and square and very small; and around the walls were paintings, still more or less preserved, whose subjects they did not then stop to ascertain. Deane turned over the thing, shrivelled and brown and leathery, which once had lived and moved and breathed even as they themselves. Said Merritt:

"It's a woman. From the dress I

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