(seq. 13)

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MelanieEvans at May 21, 2020 07:55 PM

(seq. 13)

minute & then said Miss Stone perhaps you will think
that what I am going to say is chilled & unnatural but
indeed I say it with all my heart. The chance of being of
use to you is the greatest pleasure that could come to me.
May withdrew her hand & with a confused good-night went
in. Harry went on down the street without the slightest idea
what he was doing When he came to a corner he stopped &
remembered that he wanted to go home into the house where
he lived & that he was walking in precisely the opposite direction.
WhenHe went directly to his room when he did reach the
house took a book [one?] of the new novels & sat down to read When
supper-time came he went down-stairs but in spite of his
effort he could eat nothing. He tried to keep himself from thinking
of what had happened from the vision of May's white face
that was continually [rising?] up before him & so he read
feverishly eagerly until after midnight. But it was of no
ended
use for when the book was finished & he went to bed the
[tarnished?] thoughts came up with more than the reappeared. Finally he
decided that he might as well think of it all was it have done
with it. The thing that troubled him was that the words, in the shock of May's great
danger he had suddenly realized that he had for her a feeling which
he tried to express in words when he told he that to be of service to
her was the greatest pleasure that could come to him. He thought
on his whole life & his feeling for other girls whom he had known

(seq. 13)

minute & then said Miss [Stre?] [Inhope?] you will think
that what I am going to say is chilled & unnatural but
indeed I say it with all my heart. The chance of being of
use to you is the greatest pleasure that could come to me.
May withdrew her hand & with a confused good-night went
in. Harry went on down the street without the slightest idea
what he was doing When he came to a corner he stopped &
remembered that he wanted to go home into the house where
he lived & that he was walking in precisely the opposite direction.
[When] He went directly to his room when he did reach the
house took a book [a?] of the new novels & sat down to read When
supper-time came he went down-stairs but in spite of his
effort he could eat nothing. He tried to keep himself from thinking
of what had happened from the vision of May's white face
that was continually [rising?] up before him & so he read
feverishly eagerly until after midnight. But it was of no
ended
use for when the book was finished & he went to bed the
reappeared
famished thoughts came up with more than the. Finally he
decided that he might as well think of it all was it have done
in the shock
with it. The thing that troubled him was that the words of May's great
danger he had suddenly realized that he had for her a feeling which
he tried to express in words when he told he that to be of service to
her was the greatest pleasure that could come to him. He thought
on his whole life & his feeling for other girls whom he had known