Page:Teleny, or The Reverse of the Medal, t. II.djvu/80

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72

I found on the table a note which the postman had brought the evening before. I never received letters at home, having hardly any correspondence, save a business one, which was always transacted at the office. The handwriting was unknown to me. It must be some tradesman, thought I, leisurely buttering my bread. At last I tore the envelope open. It was a card of two lines without any address or signature."

"And——?"

"Have you ever by accident placed your hand on a strong galvanic battery, and got through your fingers a shock that for a moment bereaves you of your very reason? If so, you can have but a faint impression of what that bit of paper produced on my nerves. I was stunned by it. Having read those few words I saw nothing more, for the room began to spin round me."

"Well, but what was there to terrify you in such a way?"

"Only these few harsh, grating words that have remained indelibly engraved on my mind.

"'If you do not give up your lover T…