[The Window-Gazer by Isabel Ecclestone Mackay]@TWC D-Link bookThe Window-Gazer CHAPTER XIV 25/32
And the tobacco exceptionally strong, as anyone could tell from a distance.
Why then should the hawk-eyed one delay his own felicity? This hastened matters considerably and the secretary's note-book was soon busy.
Spence felt his oldtime keenness revive.
And Desire was happy for was not this her work at last? It was a profitable day. Should anyone care to know its results, and the results of others like it, they may look up chapter six, section two, of Spence's Primitive Psychology, unabridged edition.
Here they will find that the fables of Hawk-Eye Charlie, properly classified and commented upon, have added considerably to our knowledge of a fascinating subject.
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