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Cooper, James Fenimore, 1789-1851

"The Prairie"

But shaking off the grateful sentiment,
like one who would gladly be rid of any painful, because reproachful,
emotion, he laid his hand calmly on the arm of his wife, and led her
directly in front of Inez. Pointing to the sweet countenance that was
beaming on her own, with a look of tenderness and commiseration, he
paused, to allow his wife to contemplate a loveliness, which was quite
as excellent to her ingenuous mind as it had proved dangerous to the
character of her faithless husband. When he thought abundant time had
passed to make the contrast sufficiently striking, he suddenly raised
a small mirror, that dangled at her breast, an ornament he had himself
bestowed, in an hour of fondness, as a compliment to her beauty, and
placed her own dark image in its place. Wrapping his robe again about
him, the Teton motioned to the trapper to follow, and stalked
haughtily from the lodge, muttering, as he went--
"Mahtoree is very wise! What nation has so great a chief as the
Dahcotahs?"
Tachechana stood frozen into a statue of humility.


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