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IVANHOE.

107

then offered to the Palmer, who, after a low

obeisance, tasted a few drops.

"Accept this alms, friend," continued the lady, offering a piece of gold, "in acknowledgment of thy painful travel, and of the shrines thou hast visited."

The Palmer accepted the boon with another low reverence, and followed Edwina out of the apartment.

In the anti-room he found his attendant Anwold, who, taking the torch from the hand of the waiting-maid, conducted him with more haste than ceremony to an exterior and ignoble part of the building, where a number of small apartments, or rather cells, served for sleeping places to the lower order of domestics, and to strangers of mean degree.

"In which of these sleeps the Jew?" said the Pilgrim.

"The unbelieving dog," answered Anwold, "kennels in the cell next your holiness. St Dunstan, how it must be scraped and cleansed ere it be again fit for a Christian!"

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