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   Transcriber's Note:
     Inconsistent hyphenation and spelling in the original document have  been preserved. Inconsistent punctuation in the ads section has been  left as printed. Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
     Italic text is denoted by _underscores_ and bold text by =equal  signs=.
   ARETHUSA
      ARETHUSA]
        ARETHUSA
        BY     F. MARION CRAWFORD
        AUTHOR OF "SARACINESCA," "A LADY OF ROME,"     ETC., ETC.
        _WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY     GERTRUDE DEMAIN HAMMOND_
        New York     THE MACMILLAN COMPANY     LONDON: MACMILLAN & CO., LTD.     1907
        _All rights reserved_
        COPYRIGHT, 1906, 1907,     BY THE PHILLIPS PUBLISHING CO.
        COPYRIGHT, 1907,     BY F. MARION CRAWFORD.
        Set up and electrotyped. Published November, 1907.
        Norwood Press     J. S. Cushing & Co.--Berwick & Smith Co.     Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
        THE STORY-TELLER OF THE BAZAAR     DEDICATES     THIS TALE OF CONSTANTINOPLE     TO HIS DEAR DAUGHTER     ELEANOR
   LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
        Arethusa                                           _Frontispiece_
                                                              FACING PAGE
        He was talking with an old beggar woman                        30
        She tenderly kissed the wrinkled face                          44
        'Yes,' replied the negress. 'Rustan is very affectionate. He     says that I am his Zoe, his "life," because he would surely     die of starvation without me!'                                 66
        'Tell me your story,' he said in a lower tone. 'Do not be afraid!     no one shall hurt you.'                                        88
        'Forty ducats!' cried Omobono, casting up his eyes, and preparing     to bargain for at least half an hour                           94
        All sorts of confused thoughts crowded her brain, as Zeno sat     down on a seat beside the divan                               108
        There was something so oddly fixed in his look and so dull in his     voice that Omobono began to fear that he might be a lunatic   128
        'I know them,' Zoe answered. 'If I am not telling you the     truth, sell me in the market to-morrow.'                      164
        'I did not mean to love you!'                                 194
        The captain's wife obeyed, less frightened than she had been at     first                                                         218
        Saw her sink down there exhausted, and draw a heavy silk shawl     across her body                                               240
        'Tell me what you see,' she said to the maids                 262
        'Yes!' roared the Tartar. 'Ten thousand ducats! And if I do     not find the money in the house, you two must find it in     yours! Do you understand?'                                    274
        Then, all at once, he felt that she had received one of those     inspirations of the practical sense which visit women who     are driven to extremities                                     310
        'Am I not your bought slave?' she asked. 'I must obey.'       352