Thread:Pain and anxiety (1)

pain and anxiety Tory Burch Outlet Mrs. Hamilton's love for her brother had naturally increased, strong as it always had been, even in child¬hood—and the visits which Charles had been enabled to make to Oakwood, brief in duration as they were compelled to be, had always been fraught with heartfelt, joyous happiness, not only to herself but to her husband. The pain and anxiety Tory burch Tory burch Shoes attendant on Eleanor's elopement, and the dread of its effects on Lord Delmont, had for two or three months been the sole subject of thought; but at length, and, like a fearful flash bringing a new sorrow to light, it pressed upon them that it was long after tho period that intelligence of Charles ought to have been received. Still hoping against hope, not only the Delmont family, but all who had friends and relatives on board the Lean- der, imagined that she might have drifted from her course, or been engaged on some secret and distant expedition, but Tory Burch Shoes that intelligence concerning her would and must soon Tory Burch Flats come. Alas! Tory Burch after months of agonizing suspense, information was received that several planks and masts, bearing evidence of fire as well as water, and some sea-chests, bearing names, only too soon recognized as those of some of the Leander's crew, had been cast off the coast of Barbary, and there could be no more doubt that death or Tory Burch Outlet slavery—that fearful slavery which tho bombard¬ment of Algiers had so displayed to European eyes—was the portion of all those beloved ones, for whom so many aching hearts and eyes had watched and wept in vain. It was a trial so terrible that Mrs. Hamilton felt at first as if even submission had departed from her; and she could almost have rebelled in spirit against the inscrutable decree, that had consigned one so free from vice and evil, so full of happiness and worth, to a doom so terrible. Much as she had loved and reverenced her hus¬band before, she seemed never to have felt his worth and ten¬derness till then. It was his sympathy, his strength, that recall¬ed her to a sense of her duty, and gave her power to endure, by a realization onco more of that submissiveness to a Father's will, which had never before failed her. Tory burch flats