The String of pearls, or, The barber of Fleet Street; A Domestic Romance (London: Lloyd, 1850)

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The String of Pearls (1850), p. 732
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The String of Pearls (1850), p. 732

Ben did not marry after all, and he never ceased to congratulate himself upon his escape. Mr. and Mrs. Oakley were happy in the happiness of Johanna. The mad-house at Peckham was completely pulled down, and in the well at the back of it was found the skeleton of the wretched victim of Fogg's villany. It was by his own hand that Fogg really died. Often as Johanna would sit on a winter's evening, with her children climbing upon her knee, she would, with a faltering voice, tell them what their dear father had suffered to procure for her and for them The String of Pearls.

PUBLISHED BY E. LLOYD, SALISBURY-SQUARE, FLEET- STREET.

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