[The Mummy and Miss Nitocris by George Griffith]@TWC D-Link book
The Mummy and Miss Nitocris

CHAPTER I
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CHAPTER I.
INTRODUCES THE MUMMY "Oh, what a perfectly lovely mummy! Just fancy!--the poor thing--dead how many years?
Something like five thousand, isn't it?
And doesn't she look just like me! I mean, wouldn't she, if we had both been dead as long ?" As she said this, Miss Nitocris Marmion, the golden-haired, black-eyed daughter of one of the most celebrated mathematicians and physicists in Europe, stood herself up beside the mummy-case which her father had received that morning from Memphis.
"Look!" she continued.

"I am almost the same height.

Just a little taller, perhaps, but you see her hair is nearly as fair as mine.

Of course, you don't know what colour her eyes are--just fancy, Dad! they have been shut for nearly five thousand years, perhaps a little more--because I think they counted by dynasties then--and yet look at the features! Just imagine me dead!" "Just imagine yourself shutting the door on the other side, my dear Niti," said the Professor, who had risen from the chair, and was facing his daughter and the Mummy.

"I don't want to banish you too unceremoniously, but I really have a lot of work to do to-night, and, as you might know, Bachelor of Science of London as you are, I have got to worry out as best I can, if I can do it at all, this problem that Hartley sent me about the Forty-seventh Proposition of the first book of Euclid." "Oh yes," she said, going to his side and putting her hand on to his shoulder as he stood facing the Mummy; "I have reason enough to remember that.


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