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Stories by English Authors: The Orient (Selected by Scribners) by Unknown
page 57 of 149 (38%)

If it had not been for the indifference with which she was treated in
her home, the favour with which she was regarded abroad would have
been most prejudicial to Jasmine; but any conceit which might have been
engendered in the school-house was speedily counteracted when she got
within the portals of the colonel's domain. Coming into the presence of
her father and his wife, with all the incense of kindness, affection,
and, it must be confessed, flattery, with which she was surrounded by
her school-fellows, fresh about her, was like stepping into a cold bath.
Wholesome and invigorating the change may have been, but it was very
unpleasant, and Jasmine often longed to be alone to give vent to her
feelings in tears.

One deep consolation she had, however: she was a devoted student, and in
the society of her books she forgot the callousness of her parents, and,
living in imagination in the bygone annals of the empire, she was able
to take part, as it were, in the great deeds which mark the past history
of the state, and to enjoy the converse and society of the sages and
poets of antiquity. When the time came that she had gained all the
knowledge which the old schoolmaster could impart to her, she left the
school, and formed a reading-party with two youths of her own age.
These lads, by name Wei and Tu, had been her school-fellows, and were
delighted at obtaining her promise to join them in their studies. So
industriously were these pursued that the three friends succeeded in
taking their B.A. degree at the next examination, and, encouraged by
this success, determined to venture on a struggle for a still higher
distinction.

Though at one in their affection for Jasmine, Tu and Wei were unlike
in everything else, which probably accounted for the friendship which
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