The Facts Concerning The Recent Carnival Of Crime In Connecticut


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dream, they were so freighted for me with tranquil satisfaction. I could  
not have enjoyed my pet vice more if my gentle tormentor had been a  
smoker herself, and an advocate of the practice. Well, the sight of her  
handwriting reminded me that I way getting very hungry to see her again.  
I easily guessed what I should find in her letter. I opened it. Good!  
just as I expected; she was coming! Coming this very day, too, and by  
the morning train; I might expect her any moment.  
I said to myself, "I am thoroughly happy and content now. If my most  
pitiless enemy could appear before me at this moment, I would freely  
right any wrong I may have done him."  
Straightway the door opened, and a shriveled, shabby dwarf entered. He  
was not more than two feet high. He seemed to be about forty years old.  
Every feature and every inch of him was a trifle out of shape; and so,  
while one could not put his finger upon any particular part and say,  
"
This is a conspicuous deformity," the spectator perceived that this  
little person was a deformity as a whole--a vague, general, evenly  
blended, nicely adjusted deformity. There was a fox-like cunning in the  
face and the sharp little eyes, and also alertness and malice. And  
yet, this vile bit of human rubbish seemed to bear a sort of remote  
and ill-defined resemblance to me! It was dully perceptible in the  
mean form, the countenance, and even the clothes, gestures, manner,  
and attitudes of the creature. He was a farfetched, dim suggestion of  
a burlesque upon me, a caricature of me in little. One thing about him  
struck me forcibly and most unpleasantly: he was covered all over with  
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