[The Witch of Prague by F. Marion Crawford]@TWC D-Link book
The Witch of Prague

CHAPTER XVII
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The Wanderer knew that the case was urgent and the danger great.

There was no mistaking the tone of Israel Kafka's voice nor the look in his face.

Nor did the savage resolution seem altogether unnatural in a man of the Moravian's breeding.

The Wanderer had no time and but little inclination to blame himself for the part he had played in disclosing to the principal actor the nature of the scene which had taken place in the cemetery, and the immediate consequences of that disclosure, though wholly unexpected, did not seem utterly illogical.

Israel Kafka's nature was eastern, violently passionate and, at the same time, long-suffering in certain directions as only the fatalist can be.


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