< Page:Ivanhoe (1820 Volume 2).pdf
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CHAPTER X.
I'll woo her as the lion wooes his bride.
Douglas.
While the scenes we have described were
passing in other parts of the castle, the Jewess
Rebecca awaited her fate in a distant and sequestered turret. Hither she had been led by
two of her disguised ravishers, and on being
thrust into the little cell, she found herself in
the presence of an old sybil, who kept murmuring to herself a Saxon rhyme, as if to bear time
to the revolving dance which her spindle was
performing upon the floor. The hag raised her
head as Rebecca entered, and scowled at the
fair Jewess with the malignant envy with which
old age and ugliness, when united with evil conditions, are apt to look upon youth and beauty.
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