a beautiful thing." "i can not say. not experienced in beau a bore, you know." "i know! no, indeed, i know no such thin about to go through, without any feeling of certainty that about to marry another is not comfortable. besides, he coul a burden two hearts carry very easily together, but, oh, sa a calamity. no return, however perfect, can quite compensat a careless child, and forgets promise past? he is blind--he a common instinct with certain perfervid women. conflicting a contagious disease, and we ought not to come within miles a cowardly passion. it is like the toothache; the bravest a a detective. you said to yourself, 'if he loves me as i oug a devouring flame! a fire that absorbs our whole being--a s a dictating sentiment, whence there is no appeal. it is omn a different concern." "is it duty, then?" said cosmo, with a disagreeable task for a gentleman of his years. he had tr a disorder remarkably infectious among us at present, ever a divine virtue. but why drag that word into the conversati a feeling which has so little to do with the world, a passi affected by any difference of years. desdemona loved othell a fool, or has no experience. the latter was the case of hu a four-foot, and here's my love," roland said, going outsid a fruit that matures itself without the sunshine," replied , after all, so incredible a revelation that it is not wonde after that fashion, and of this at any rate you may be sure a furnace, and their sole ecstasy is revenge." "no country against it. and god, i think god must be against it, too." a giant. chapter ii. the french provinces were now organize a god. oh, my darling, i have learnt to love you dearly and a great and beautiful thing too, and if you agree with me, a great fanner of the flame of hope; and love was always mi a great love, but it is a selfish love. she is willing that a great master." "i am reading," says she. "can't you see t a great thing; it is more than crowns or queen's jewels. yo a horror to every pure mind; it was to the minister the mos "-"ah!" the girl looked up at him suddenly, her countenance a jewel that's well known all the world over'--this observa a kind of milk-and-watery sentiment, which would never lead a kind of religion, harry," he answered. "we will not joke a lifting no less than a swelling of the heart, what change a little frightened to think what she has done, and all she all fair and above board; but it is quite impracticable to all important. she cannot throw it from her as a man may do all in all with women; not only politics but religion must all on his own side. instinctively he shrinks from such inw all on one side, as with me.' 'o no, no: there is nothing l alloyed with mortal fallibility. owing much already to his all that i desire in life. nevertheless, understand me, i w all the better for keeping--if it is good for anything; and all the riches she knows. earth has not a consolation or a all the world to me,--though it makes all the difference be all very well," continued sir thomas, in his gruffest voice almost always unable to indulge in any other luxury. it is almost equally unpleasant,--if the man be anything of a man already given, which would have been a sufficient answer to already gone and past, and instead thereof is seen its wint already treachery to the new. such women are not necessaril altogether unpardonable, i must remind them that all his gr a luxury which none but the rich or the poor can afford. we always an upward-looking love, "the desire of the moth for always as unbecoming to a man as it is becoming to a woman. always blind, they say. i've a great mind to take her to ta always fanciful, and takes fright upon any pretext. could a always freezing into fear. she wants everything, she is sec always going from him, and coming home; and some of it ling always loquacious where it is sure of not being laughed at. always new. i've asked the wise to tell me how a loving wom always some honest man's wife. what had those two to keep t always sorrowful." "always?" asked lorimer, with a half-smi always sure, and always young. whatever befalls, it keeps c always tempted to speech which seems its contradiction. rea always the deepest, and it is but few girls that call it fo always the same, and when a man feels that tender emotion h always the strongest-many a one has been over head and ears a madness, having heaven's wisdom in it--a spark. but even a mad passion that will not be subservient. prejudice is a a man in a scrape, in a hole, in a pitfall, in a pitiful co a match between ecstasy and compliance. another thought fle a mere bauble, and no human being ever exchanged for it one a microscope. what he did not know was, that his timid ardo among worldly people. it cannot be supposed that the arriva a more regal weapon than force; and when she took it up she amusement; with us, it is life. leave these mountains! well an affair of passion or amusement, of the world and the day an affair of two, and is only for two that can be as quick, an all-powerful master: an overfilling tyrant. in the first an auger that can pierce the heart, if not the soul; but to an awful thing, not to the untrue only, but sometimes to th , and compels respect. she drew his eyes to her so that he c ! and do you know that she is not really my niece--only a po and has been for two years the predominant emotion of my he , and have never felt its pains, would deem me mad. impelled (and he is as romantic as one of you young folks of sevente ; and may it never know!" "by the rood! you do me wrong," cr ; and might have even tasted of happiness, but for the poiso , and one of us shall have the girl he loves, unless any har ; and there are, undoubtedly, a multitude of wives who have . and there's the ladder lying under that corn-rick in the f !--and the word carries nothing of its weight. tell me you d --and this at forty years old. how some people would laugh! ; and though, in her heart, there were all the materials for ? and yet this was not the worst of it. such love as she had an enchanter, whatever you may think, who strangely lengthe an idle word," she says, her eyes flashing. "it may be--to an imposition, parental authority is a fact." "i will get m an instinct belonging to the immortal life, a tongue of fir an instrument like any other thing, and that we must play o an involuntary passion which reason vainly tries to subdue? a noble and beautiful thing. good night, my son, god's beni a nobler thing than avarice like yours. well, as the sin is another affair, thank god. it is not a thing to be gained b another. arthur did not know how to oppose nancy, how to ma an overflowing danger; and when he said: 'the burden you ha an overrated passion; it would be irremediably discredited an unceremonious thing, and what in the world should happen an unselfish passion; or, at all events--if the painful doc an utterly bygone, sor an utterly bygone, sorry, worn-out, miserable thing with me anything to her, she'll stay this day with me." feemy looke a part of my life." "yes, but there might come a crushing b a part of us--it is our manifestation of life; and poisonou a passing breath, a gentle gale that beats on the face and a passion that has been much talked of, often described, an a passion, which, like hate, envy, avarice, &c., has risen a passion whose effects are various ; it ever brings some c a pathological condition. i am painfully aware of the objec a perilous step for any woman who has a heart within her bo a personal experience of the very few. think of our common a plant of early growth, and that the individuals that they a plant which, while it is hardy to endure many things, wit a poet, 'with a woeful ditty to his mistress's eyebrow.' pr a poor man to save ?" asked mrs. jubb. dort-joey grind dowr a possible strength in an actual weakness. marriage transfo a potent and untameable passion, disdaining the narrow limi a priceless treasure. alice prays you not to grieve for her apt to awaken in us, they all worked together in the girl's apt to cloud the clearest eyes. "to be sure she may. it wil apt to modify the conscience." "what i would do,--i would t apt to wear itself out very quickly with some men. your bai a rapid impulse--a flame ignited in a moment. yes, i know t a safe love!" "were danger alone in my way," said peveril, a salutary preparation for our own; and, as to the other ca as a thread of silk against a cable, compared to mine. even as bitter ashes,--my hopes are extinct;--oh, that i had die as catching or as dangerous as the smallpox. we imagine tha as different from another's as the one is himself different a selfish thing, let us say what we will of it besides. "da as false as your character. mistress mallet is the real obj as full of hopes as fears--rapid, causeless, wild--yet she as hard to kill as any snake: "now, at the last gasp of lov a sight to behold; and the clergyman had certainly no right a sight which is not pleasant to him. he tried to shut it o a sin," he said, quietly. "if you had lived in the world as ?" asked saville. "first love," cried lady charlotte; "is it as lovely in the old as in the young--lovelier when in them , as mine, true, honest, and thorough. for her sake i wish i a sort of fever which does not last beyond two years," than a sowre delight, and sugred griefe, a living death, and eve as precious to me as it ever was, and i will not give up th as sacred in my eyes as you are. i intend to make her my wi as sincerely repaid. but quentin's dreams, which at first p as strong a passion, at any rate, as drinking or gambling. as sure as that?" said philip. "did he write it himself, th as sweet on potatoes and herrings three times a day, as on a state of being; the beloved object is our center; and our a stone bench, shaded by a honeysuckle bower, close to a fo a storm that passes?" "it passes, i hope." "but where is yo a strange word on a craftsman's lips, but 'cold flint hides a subjective thingthe essence itself of man, as that great a sweet a dreadful passion: what we two have gone through f a sweet thing to all young hearts; and were i a boy in the as well as any one, and had felt it as deeply, yet she did as withering as the hand of time. no, no, i have no right t a talisman by which he holds and hopes to get his safety. a a terribly quarrelsome thing. make us a present of a few da at first an absorbing delight, blunting all other sensibili at first fixed upon a woman who could afford it no return; at her feet, her arm upon his lips; and on the fair naked a a thing as any spirit free,'" quotes he, tenderly. "how sha a thing that can hardly be concealed by lovers from each ot a thorny plant, that grows up and bears one bright flower, at present an inhabitant of the tower," replied courtenay, at stake, i cannot fail!" the mummy smiled as he read the t at the bottom of the mystery?" "but you spoke but now," rep at the castle of the sire de montmorency. speed thither fas at the heart of every right way, and essential forgiveness a tyrant--not a slave: we cannot bind him to the chariot wh a vanity lighted up by the cold ignis fatuus of a volatile a very bad illness." "it is the worst illness in the world, a very common lot. and we meet every day, men--ay, and wome a very contradiction of all the elements of our ordinary na a very different thing from drawing-room civility.' 'not ve a very fleeting sentiment. the cost of the article, too, su a very good thing, tom, when a man can enjoy it, and make h a very irritable sort of state, at least for the imaginatio a very old and common thing, and i believe i love you in th a virtue or a crime. these thoughts were in the lawyer's mi a vision which returns to us to the last, and brings with i --avowing in the same breath that you did love me! am i the awake, and he will be sorrier and sorrier for what he did! a woman's," put in gerard half contemptuously. "because the a wonderful incident in a man's life, it is not that only t a wonderful quickener of the perceptions, and, ignorant as barren; it comes too late. remember what you once said, tha beautiful: why should not a romance be full of these suprem become the lord of all,' and when he reigns, he reigns unri before. she was not one of the many who trifle away their h best expressed by the look which accompanies the word, and best. how happy henry is in his affection for you! you are best. it is everything. it is the crown of life. shall i gi best, joris. what my neighbours said would be little care t best of all. i have many such benefactions registered in my bestowed upon another, he will scarcely find such delight i best?" to this he made prompt answer, though not in words-- betrayed a womanl 'nay,' i hear you say, 'we have our fault better for being thus solely the creature of imagination: i better than a pair of spectacles, to make every thing seem better than faith, for it endures. what we no longer believ better than glory; and a tranquil fireside, with the woman better than money, isn't it?" "indeed it is," said miss bel better than old family estates. i almost wish he may recove between opposites, so that the grave may love the gay; perh blind and jealous. i never hoped again until he told me tha blind, and love's arguments, though specious, are sadly del blind; and nathaniel had a cast in his eye; and perhaps the blind, and that none was ever blinder or more headstrong th blindest just when the bandage is being removed from his fo blind, he may have left you clear-sighted in this instance. blind! how wise the ancients were to make him a childa thin blind in some respects, and in moments of joy is very dull blind. is it venus," saucily, "or helen of troy, i most clo blind, is perfectly true; they can see no imperfection in t blind. they say the blind are very happy, yet i never met a blind, yet i must confess that, like kittens and some other bliss to him who can gain it; and i love you with all my so bonny, a little while, while it is new." its feet had not y born for nothing else." "a deplorable state of things!" exc born of the brain oftener than of the heart, being a strang brought before my mind, and my heart, like the bee, draws t bur buried; and my heart is there!"--she pointed to the heavens buried, hilda, and i am all your own. no one is any the wor busy--what more can you offer son of man than these? he had but a heap of ashes. for my part, i have chosen my destiny but an accident in a man's life, while it is everything in but a name. oh, would," an but a name. oh, would," and she clasped her hands eagerly t but a poor affair. mr. coleman took him into the firm as a but cold porridge to a man that has to pull on the nets all but one thing among many." "it is the one thing," said harr but the vestibule--the pylon--to the temple of love. a gard but to fear; seest thou not that the power of which thou bo capable of." "i can do nothing," said rachel, hoarsely. "do care-taking and patronizing, and who rather prefer a weak m certainly a strange and wonderful power, affecting all thin certainly the fittest for verse, therefore we have no choic change--and the certain end--we have resolved, suffragan, o chaste, whose caress is pure, whose brides never put off th cheated every day in this way by offenders much more seriou cherished there! the outlaw. when tom linton parted with mr chiefly for the maid as something appertaining to the queen circmnscribed, it glows with greater ardour. when fitageorg combined with hoand honour-women love the brave, and young, coming home!" ere the week was out, there stood above the d concerned, after the first true affection, the heart is wit concerned, and, having pointed out the risk you will incur, concerned, for love that is noble and true, will not justif concerned, to stand between miss milroy and her heart's des concerned wisdom is not much considered." "but people have confined within the rank that keeps a gig. i did think aunt conqueror and king. these lovers, therefore, went to church conspiracy, not friendship!" in the midst of this banishmen dangerous, and to see it, a communication of the disease. p dangerously near--scarcely perceptible." "why dangerously?" dead, and no amount of sighing can bring him to your arms. dead?" "ay, my little lass, it may be a great wrong to love dead beyond hope. but need one si dead beyond hope. but need one sink into a slough of vilene dead, but here is a minute to kneel over the grave and pray dead!" "he is worse than dead," said hall. "he is shamed." dead, killed by my hard words that miserable night at felto dead, mary. there is nothing left of it but a handful of as dead. "not slowly did he die. a meteor from the sky falls n dead," she murmurs, leaning naked arms upon the window-sill death, and this is the reward of constancy. poor alice, but declared,[1] it must be very improper that a young lady sho deep and holy love, for which a man or woman might well liv deep as the sea and as definite as its tides; who lives to deeper than repentance, seeing that without love there can deepest; and that was mine.' 'who told you that?' said knig derived from sympathy--the feeling of union--of unity. any desolating her. she leans her head against the woodwork, an destiny; and the heart is its own fate. there are those to develops them to their utmost." "and what is love to a man? different from mine: i esteem and respect him; i have even different,' said ursula. 'he must have been cast off by his diffident and fearful; but it must now find a voice, to whi disagreeing with you. if i were you i should clear out of t discovered, or can be thwarted?" "hush! ximen sought me thi disenhallowed; while the hand was on the rose, the thought dishonour." sentiment enjoys its splendid moods. wilfrid ha disinterested--she will not bring an ignoble name into your divine, when the weather is fine, and a season of bliss--a done with between us. surely, power, after that night you k down at the bottom of my heart. but i feel it bubbling ther ." "do you, maggie?" "what for wad i ken? is the leddy bonni ." "do you?" "you should know whether i do or not." "should earth's soft lore, look where ye will--earth overflows with either a transient passion or a sham copied from his favori either the greatest bliss or the profoundest misery the sou electricity. two telegrams are enough to settle the busines , else wouldst thou pity me a little.' 'what! art afraid, co embarrassed, at first starting, with a novice. byron. it wa emperor. "dearest ethel," said villiers, "i have much to te enough, hugh. -that was why." the end. chapter i an excursi enough to draw her mind away from them,--at her age! what f erased and blotted out of both." guy darrell bowed his head essentially a selfish passion. what amount of egotism, then essentially reticent, hiding itself away from the eye of ma eternal. and you have loved me. and you tell me you love me eternal!--the veil is down, and memory stings!" she turned even beyond the biographer's. to her, the handwriting itsel ever apt to do so." " oh! my adored calantha, look not thus ever at cross purposes. the heart of this gentle being stir ever cradled in mystery;--to reveal it to the vulgar eye, a ever modest) seemed to oppose every plan she could think of ever on the wing, but, like the birds in april, it hath not ever timid; and whatever may have been barbara hare's other ever timid; but in her case there were other feelings which , everything is easy, or, if not easy, yet to be accomplishe everything." nora shook herself, and determined that she wo every thing that ought to make me happy, but " "will you go everything to me--but it may not be everything to philip. i exaggerated too. and now constance, without knowing it, had , except that it is an empty dream." "marriage, my dearest. exclusively hers." lady ellis drew down the corners of her fair matrimony, you may depend upon that, alida.'" "then, c faith, and faith, like a gathered flower, will rootlessly l false or true. it isn't love, you see. it's something else. false ; the thought is falser far for some of them are true far beyond such grovelling delights; and the peril of such far in front, and pauses at the check of pride; what chance far more ecstatic than in man, inasmuch as it is unfevered first and last with her as with all warm first and last with her as with all warm natures. but she m first spoken and returned; when the dearest eyes are daily fled ; courage my heart, thou canst love no more. pale is m followed by sudden hate," says the gaelic proverb; but ther food for fortune's tooth,"-he closed the books. "it is in v fool's paradise. but console yourself out of boccaccio. 'bo for anne,--anne, who, without energy and pride, i scarcely for boys, who have still to know themselves, and for poets, for ever.' 'i am sure it is!' she repeated fervently. 'o ph for goodness and for you, papa." ethel would have thought h for him, so that anything--everything he thinks right is ri for ladies--fine ladies in silks and satins--pure--virtuous formed for the first time, and felt most strongly, is seldo for my poor lost son. i can esteem him, regard him; but, lo ; for oh, surely, if there be feelings in this life at all t for our lady and the saints. ah! i will show you the pictur found so easy and rapid, as to be scarcely perceptible. and free, and yet a very tyrant. oh, philip, forget such vain t frequent in the thoughts of the woman he has chosen, feels frequently ambitious in choosing its object; or, which come fresh, and every feeling produced thereby is new and wonder fretted for and heart-nursed. whatever is a woman's love ma from everlasting, to everlasting. he changeth not." "ay; i from everlasting to everlasting. her poor heart, wearied wi fulfilled. and i have dragged thy glory down, woman, and i full of imagination. mary easily glided from the earth's de gay--its fruit too often bitter. so does she know on whose gemmed with tears. it was understood that the young men wer generally for the time being a religious man; his affection generally given. "i hope with all my heart that you may win given by god, john. it holds fast for ever and ever. a girl given, i shall never marry at all." ah, where was the use o . god bless him, and all true knights! i say." "oh, in love- god's work, and therewith i meddle not." "god's work, indee gone, but pity remains. i thought that was gone, too." "yes gone by: therefore, notwithstanding the power of your charm gone! morley had fancied the scenery around him beautiful-- gone!" "my daughter, there is the bond of a higher love. ma gone, you are without love, without obligation. see, then, good, i co great, but it is not slavish or silly. do you think, sir, t great, elizabeth. my little boy! i have wronged him shamefu greater than hate." she covered the face and went out. chap greater than knowledge. for those who have neither heart no greater than minewho can do everything?... if god our fathe greater than that of most, forgiveness now seems difficult. great, the littlest doubts are fear; where little fears gro great, woman," i said; "and this love of yours has brought grown to such excess, i cannot sum up half my sum of wealth hardly capable of such secrecy as this. in the fulness of h hardly granted to the gods above." "well, well, to-day goes , has given birth to the consideration of what difficulties heaven, and heaven is peace and love. nor could heaven itse ! he can see ready wit in harriet, but will not dine alone f he? poor gentleman," said fanny with a sigh, and her eyes t here--ay, here, in nottingham castle, with the princess ele here!" on the morning that hyde sailed for america, corneli hers; hers only in spite of my early marriage. the rest of !' he said, drawing a chair near the fire, and looking round he, who is exposed to contumely; but for that, methinks i w higher than he, and condescends in giving herself to him.' highest gain. no art can make it: it must spring where elem highly and nobly bestowed--most highly--most nobly; but if his creative energy; they are one: god his creative energy; they are one: god's punishments are fo his real motive of action, as i can prove to you. poor clau his religion!" said she, warmly. "then his religion is heat holy and blessed, my dear, when it comes in its due season hopeless, and that yours is no less so. did you not refuse hopeless and u hopeless and unreturned; and i trust she will forget it." " hopeless; to hate him for the very attributes that have mad hot sometimes, soon it grows cold," muttered aunt fanny, wh , however much you write about it!" "i hope i never shall, i , how sweet it would be to me to snatch such bliss, even on hurt, it is self-love that requires the opiate. conning gav . i am almost sure that it must be mabel; because when i thi !" i answer: "that person does not know what the better love iced on prudence, and their hatreds have not a particle of , i do love her still. , i do love her still. she is all the world to me. i have no . if i ask dorothy, she looks at geoffrey heron and sighs. i , if i can at all understand it, i did love her with all my . i know what it is. i have loved. for ten years,--for ten l ill to bind, and hard to draw. i love few in this world, an imminent, cannot rest until the parting be over. "you are a immortal, and knows nothing of age or death." . ingram gaze immortal, and that there is a perfect life awaiting us, if immortal, unco immortal, unconquerable, unchangeable, and waits for thee e in adversity, he becomes the more dear to her in proportion in all things a most wonderful teacher, and perhaps love (f in change; and you know, in your heart, that you feel it. i indeed a fluid mercurial realm, continually shifting the pr , indeed, a noble gift! and now, for your sake, i am here, p indeed insipid: it is like a dinner of cold boiled mutton o indestructible! its holy flame for ever burneth-from heaven indispensable,--if not one, then another. with a cheek burn in herself worthy of it. do i understand you right that it in itself an end, it must be regarded as a beginning to be in itself a recommendation--his sentiment, as he looked ove in itself such ecstacy, that all we leave for it is nothing in men's minds generally independent of esteem, and believi in my heart all the same. but this is not the time to speak in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred utterly wasted; it is in possession?" "i believe that love can only come when rea in question. men can talk of the object of their affections , in such a man for such a woman? there are comparatively fe insult and pollution, and can but end in shame and despair. intended to imply intelligent selection. it involves an ave intense, but undemonstrative; their hatred implacable, but in the case, dear child," said the count, interrupting her, , in the creed of sentiment, and of plays, and novels, a suf ." in the intervals of time not passed in lily's society, ke in this world. he released her when they were on level grou intoxicating to any girl of eighteen, even though the roman in vain. instead of making me happy it will make me wretche involuntary. it does not often run in a yoke with prudence. inwrought in our enthusiasm as electricity is inwrought in in your hands." she seemed indifferent on hearing it. he sh , i perceive at the bottom of all this the usual intermedler . i returned home weeping, but happy. and do you think--do y , isabel; to think of nobody, and care for nobody, but one; . i think no two loves were ever the same since the creation . it is different, i fear, with most fathers: but i am bound ? it is stronger than time, stronger than prisons, stronger ? it is thinking kindly and nobly. for if we give all we hav it? it is just as when you and i, when we see something nic itself so novel, so revolutionary, such a break-down of all its own great loveliness always, and takes new beauties fro its own justification, and sees itself in all its objects: its own reward, but dorothy received much more. for, in the . it was hawked through the late inquiries by mr. crisparkle it which says this clandestinely, furtively, thievishly!and it which says this to a young lady, who otherwise could loo , i ween, your last love; for all were true in their time. " jealous of the past as well as of the future. love, as well jealous." "vernon!" thought lucretia; "he must go, and at o just like fire: it goes out if it hasn't fuel." "nay, i wan killed as dead by her poisonous communications as fair rosa killed in you; you are only half yourself now, and you must killed. why, even then the dead thing was inestimably preci known in vain. it is a vision of what might have been in th known to her, and burn to read her history. when she is abo known to make one interesting, and if luke could have broug known too late. we are mariners cast on a rock within a cab law and gospel. while he thought these heavy things, feelin left him: 'tis the poor man's lamb; and would you take it?" left out," said he. "but you do believe in love where a gir less a passion than a symbol. mejnour, shall the time come less be less beguiling; wisest were the lovers in the days of old. , let the differences of taste, the unfitnesses of temperame life. the misfortune is when we stake our all on one love a light as a man's? but better, than i did when i shed those lighter than thistledown, whose element is the ruelle of on like a cast and a mould, where there is an impression upon like a choice wine of exquisite bouquet and intoxicating fl like all great things, affecting us with awe when we first like a melody that's sweetly played in tune." the dog did n like any other luxury. you have no right to it unless you c like a puff of smoke,--it changes with every wind. and she like a woman's,--restless, fearful, uncomfortable, sleeples like; in the other, i defy you to know anything about her; like one of those fine elixirs, which some skilful and life like that you have been speaking of?" "heaven forbid!--no-- like the banyan tree, which increases its own volume by cas like the coming of spring: the date is not to be reckoned b like the cuckoo in the nest--it elbows out everything else. like the other things--an empty cant. this is the only way. like the red, red rose that's newly sprung in june; my love like the sea, as changeful and as free; sometimes she's ang like the sky, as distant and as high; perchance she's fair like to fall asleep, they prate and tease themselves into j like undertaking to sew without a needle, or dig without a like unto a well sealed and kept secret, a deep-hidden foun little better than a cheat! 'that was not all,' said katie, little more than a vision; you must wait a few years yet be long contented to be fed, though granted by adeline with mo lord of the world, love must yet be lord in his heart. it w lost, but we will not the less be friends." then he rose su lost indeed, but there where i found it i will abide till t love, and ever will be, in spite of them." she made other a love, and only god is stronger." a few days afterward the a love at all, it surely means complete union; and one cannot love! ay, it was to the dark certainty of catherine's miser love. but i had much more than a fancy for the marquis font love for evermore." the rosary, st. john's wood: that was t ! love!--methought that word denoted all that was high and n love !" "you speak like an oracle," replied cuthbert, pulli lurking nigh; the pleading look, the starting tear, that pa made a vague regret, eyes w made a vague regret, eyes with idle tears are wet." --the m made, far more than by the words themselves. when they star made in earnest, at the proper time of year, with the dark- made of, and it had long been growing threadbare. he had re made of that with something added. can my reason discover a made to me, dear, for catholics are human. the other day it mad. it is so mad, that had the ties between me and my dear madness, if you like. out of this spot i 'll never stir til making him miserable, and so is yours, dear." "oh yes." "so married to a secret assassin!" he thought despairingly, "an master of the wisest? it is only fools who defy him. i must meant to comfort and brighten life, but not to rule it like mentioned. george jernam saw the blush, and thought that mi mere turmoil. who wouldn't release himself from it for ever mine." "but my duty is theirs. and if it came to a contest- mingled. she is so utterly unlike all other women he has ev mockery and deceit. 'tis like the mirage of the desert that more ready to purify itself than most other loves -yet ther more skilful than any device of philosophy. she explained e more strong than a fever. and then," she added, "i had a pu more to me than an empress. millions would not buy my alleg more to me than my home: we will fight the world togetherth more to me than such knowledge can ever be. if he is marrie more to your taste than hatred; therefore i will go on as f most exacting. its idol must not listen to a tender word, o most to be valued which cannot be easily won. in my opinion much too fond to believe 'em. colonel forrester found his s my abomination, his hatred my dread. pity me, kind creature my life now. what else is there? do not move," she cried vi my life. send your answer to my city lodging. i shall follo my life. why do you come to me, agellius, with your every-d my love's sweet pain. in the place of caresses thou givest my patent of nobility. but i may glorify what you love--and natural; but surely pity and faithfulness and memory are na natural to men, i suppose,' rejoined the young lady. 'but y naught but lying. its wiles are jests to earnest carried, w nearest allied to hatred, and mine has become hatred--bitte near!" meanwhile prince pietro, moved by conflicting sentim needful--love, the only true artist--love, the only opener neither thorough nor constant. i wanted a genial partner fo never easy,--never easy, even though it be so common. there never wasted : it is like the rain which fertilizes, and th never wise," sighed philter. "she may have been in love wit new, and fresh to us as the dew; and we are together. as th new to you. you don't know that a man can be happy in his w next to the power of god's love. like a flower long repress no better than lust. greta, i understand you. it is not for noble and superior, we contract a re-> semblance to the obj no doubt a national failing." she remembered the impertinen no evil in the cup of matrimony. however, the question of t no great addition to my sorrow, nor does the gain of your p no help. alms and pity will do nothing for me. it must be t no less sacred to me.' her senses were playing the traitor; no more within my reach than if i were the corpse i feel." none the less sincere because i shrink from asking you to a no new thing to me. it is a very old love. i have loved you nonsense, and poetry, she and i will go to the stake for th , nor i either, except love for your parents or your kinsfol no shadow less than yours," she said, with earnestness whic not a composed thing," said gervase, leaning closer to her. not a feeling to be called up at will in the heart, but the not always to be fed on learning, eh? i shall have to dress not always to be touched to tenderness even at the sight of not an inhabitant of the earth. we worship him as the athen not, a photographic power. still he could see her shadowly; not a railway the quiet seclusion of dingley dell, the pres not a selfish passion. on the contrary, it is a self-denyin not as good as the servants, if to have gratitude in your h not a thing to be had for the mere asking: and dancing was not casting out law. not all the laws in the universe can s not common sense. 'tis a passion; like not common sense. 'tis a passion; like your jealousy, poor not depravity. to have felt it, and to feel it no more, is not everything. and to think how he had been looking and ta not everything; life is something; and there is plenty for not far behind. and then this man, who had been cross and r not for me. it's been the lord's will to put me here to do not founded upon any merit, rests only on being and need, a not found in all families; and where it does not exist, the not good for gaining the mastership; and i have heard that not here!".. she said in tired, soft tones; "i left him, bu nothing but a memory; a peace which is so nearly akin to ha nothing more than profession. her views are something baser nothing more than vanity pleased; wound the vanity, and you nothing?' she trembled from head to foot; then, as if clutc nothing then?" "is all to be sacrificed to your love? think nothing worth. when scarcely seventeen, she had loved with not in one's own gift, to be bestowed as one pleases. you h not is killing. and if any one is desirous of spreading the not like anything else. it forces to speak, it makes you bo not like that; that it is faithful and true: and that women not like to be mine," said richard, laughing, as one not ye not limited to fty years, and december will attempt the con not linked with honour?" "honour?" echoed the marquis, lift not love that alters when it alteration finds, or bends wit not love unless it is the love of true minds. that was said not love, unless, when betrayed by love, it appeals to deat not love when it mingled with respects that stand aloof fro not love which alters when it alteration finds.' but it was not love which alters when it alteration finds." in some re not love which alters when it alteration finds, or bends wi not making it," may be true, yet it is undoubtedly a very g not making it." "perhaps not," answered chartley; "but, if not mere romance. and oh, sister, credit me, a scots lassie not mine to give." it was some relief to her proud heart to not my business: and if it was, i should not select mr. sev not my love. are there more eugenes in the world than one? not my real self, but one in my image; the one i might have not noble. she is as i am. nor is she so fair as thou. yet not nonsense, uncle. you remember the old english song you not often the first thought, even where it lurks in modern not of the prattling sort." "oh, nonsense; i don't believe not perfect love until it has been watered again and again not proved to be true in the one heart, and i am sure there not real, but acted, you must always portend you 're insane not returned"---"eh, eh," interrupted the old salt, pursing not so hot as to burn from a distance; but wolnoth, thy mot not so necessary to us women as people think. fine writers not so simple a thing as people think, at least in these ar not strong enough to endure the pang of distrust. was ever not such as will uphold an engagement, it will sink of itse not such a very generous passion. roland found his cousin a not such, even though potent; nay, this passion hath as lar not that irremediable calamity which romance has delighted not that law must go. law is indeed necessary, but woe to t not the only leveller of disparities of rank and position. not the passion which swallows up all the rest. humanity, l not the primary consideration, if she had followed that sim not to be bought by services. all she could give she has gi not to be despised when it comes from a fine nature. there not to be dispelled by a mountebank's decoction.' 'but supp not to be lord of all with me. i shall steer my little boat not to be our master. you can choose, as i say; but i have not to be trusted in, in such emergencies. his mother saw, not to marry--not if the man was a prince!" persisted barba not wanted by the bosom that owns them. we teach ourselves not what i dreamed it; and i, who was so foolishly glad to not what i hoped it was." "ah, my friend!" she said, going not worth much." "i hope we may both live till you learn th not yet a master, in which we can say, "i will love, i will not yet diverted from his play thing; leave me to manage, y now a principleit cannot be extinguished, but it may be sac no warrant for the doing of a hurt to the creature beloved. now a thing of the past. i have to look back upon it and sa now grown wise. he follows fortune." "good-morning, sir." " --now had arisen, and would force its way. he did not think now. stop while you can. i can be sorry for you, but i will nursed with more visionary food than man's; and, in our col occasionally on the man's side; perhaps on the lady's. perh of adamant, polished but not broken by use. but you dare me , of all things on earth, the most pertinacious and unreason of life the light. two loving hearts may sever, yet hope sh of man's life a thing apart." but the scorn was of the sent of man's life a thing apart. 'tis woman's whole existence." of man's life a thing apart; 'tis woman's whole existence." of many kinds. 'but i was going to say something, lyddy,' t of so mad and absurd a nature, that it is all he can do to often a dangerous one. very little will turn it into hatred often a trivial incident in his life, marriage is the great often stronger and more worthy of a woman's acceptance than often tested in song and story by the ordeal of a horrible of that light, changeable sort, which is not worth having-- of the nature of a burning glass, which kept still in one p of the world, worldly. were she free to wed me, i would do of those things that cannot die. and perhaps it is a questi ? old osborne did not speculate much upon the mingled nature omnipotent, and will sometimes supersede even marriage. thi once admitted to their hearts, there is no counter-check to once set going, even the sandwich tray, and dr. grant doing one grace oglander of beckley barton. "here, again, you per one of the first things to be frightened away by poverty. g one of those things that people may talk about a great deal one thing, to marry another. so long as he was sure of anne one with our sorrow? "these thoughts have been much borne i only an extended, scarcely an expanded, selfishness. mrs. a only estranged for a time, not alienated for ever." "i trus only part of a man's life, while it is all a woman's. clara only suppressed.' 'don't you know yet, that in thus putting only the brute and insensate feeling of the progenitor to t open to us both. i do not fail to appreciate the immense ad , or you would be well aware that it is, indeed, as you said our perfect safety. it is hard upon him that his own childr out of date." sarah enjoyed her temper. "you are right, dea out of the question as when it is deeply involved. it is on out of the question." "i can't afford it, my dear." "but is out of the question) in this man, who seems so great, and, out of your eyes, and out of everything ye do." and the lit over; and there is no more sunshine now!' 'i will make a fo over, but it has unfitted me for any species of love resemb overlooked thus early, before it can claim any affinity to over, yours has to come. there lies the difficulty: and the papa." "papa!" echoed fanny, faintly, and with surprise. pe pastime, leave or are left with elegant sorrow and courtly peace and virtue, and right living, and t peace and virtue, and right living, and that is only madnes pensive,--is it not, cleveland? how often i ask myself that perfect!--and so far as i am concerned there shall never be perfected, may she, casting out fear, forget also duty. and perilous for principle! "you have understood me, i know, an pleasant to behold, how much more charming the aspect of th plucked from them, the life goes with it. he backed on his poor and trifling compared to love divine!' her eyes darken possible, may not spring of an altogether happy conjunction preached as a debt we owe to strangers, let alone our own b precious like cold veal, and your love for that chap is hot prematurely ripened by the influence of language, climate, present, and as his presence is what a woman and all a woma present. had she been even in london, her terror would have presumably the visitor. of the greater loneliness of women, pretty enough for a princess of the blood royal, and for he prodigiously developed in the greater number of subjects th prosperous and confessed. ione no longer concealed from gla proud! how trifling becomes the pang of some malignant depr proved to be innocent of my father's death, let my blood re pure, and only in proportion to that, can such be a pure an purer and more unselfish than any other love: and so it is. pure," she would say; as if that were the talisman which re pure, though i am base. i will never slander that again, fo quenched by a man's crime. women in this respect are more e quick," said mr. filmer. "i did not recognise it;" and in a quick to know when it is spurned and hopeless: and hope die quite at the other end of the pole of feeling. what do you rare. i thought i would just come and tell you of mine.' 'o rarely a very intense affection in women. it is not so with rarely eloquent. with her soft cheeks blushing, her pale ey rare, than in the humbler home, where they may need each ot real; love shall endure till all the suns are dead, and yet really,' she sobbed, 'pretty. it... it took me by surprise; real--the most real, the most lasting, the sweetest and yet reckless, and glib of speech; it takes little heed of the f ," replied anne pettishly. "you affect to be jealous of me, resumed in angel perfection at the point where death suspen returned--heaven help him! honour, generosity, friendship, returned. i read it even now in thine eyes, thy lips ; and ripened depends less upon the actual number of years that h sacred. wherever i see it (as one sometimes may in this wor ," said dahlia, in an underbreath. could robert inspire her !" said miss vavasor, and sighed again as if she knew what l said to be the death of self." "no; but i must use cant wor said to laugh at locksmiths. to be sure, in this country, a sair to bide." chapter xii. "we met, hand to hand, we clasp sanctified and made immortal when baptised in the blood of satiated with excess? or that disappointment has followed u satisfied in the completeness of the beloved object. "i hav scarcely to be distinguished in its effects from love itsel seen. "are you fond of my brother?" asked davie, after a pa selfish, and does not heed other people's griefs and passio selfish, and in an instant he reverted to his own hopes and selfish in the rapture of being loved! words cannot tell, h selfish." "leave me--leave me!" hugh ritson paused; the war selfishness rampantly roused--to be at last, like death, sw !" she said, with a sort of grim satire in her tone. "yet ev shown when a man, after years of service, can hear and see, silent. out i silent. out in the world there, on the skirts of the woodla . "sit still boys, or i'll skin you"--sergeant jakes' voice small.' on the sunday evening which followed eleanor's wedd small." rachel was silent. "if you really love him you will so deeply root ed that it may silently subsist in our heart so disinterested--sometimes." "no, no; she told me she was so fatally robust, and can bear so many attacks! lady lindo so fiery." the next day mrs. dodd took julia apart and aske so full of surprises; it is the perpetual miracle that no o so good, so true? he would not have dreamed of kissing her so hopeful, and so blind! there was a hectic flush on her c sometimes but a transfer of self-love from one fund to anot somewhat curious, and worth inquiring into, as it displays so morbidly sensitive and jealous that it is always apt to so much more than gold, that it really signifies very littl so much the creature of her imagination, always asks someth so necessary to the completion of life." and the inward mon soonest cold," is the burden of an old song, and true enoug soothfast?" "how so?" asked the queen. "how precious such a so rich that the englishman addressed to isaura during thos so splendid, it is the greatest pity it should be impossibl so strongly proved as his has been; and it ought to be adeq so sweet! she slept towards morning, as walter did, and whe sought; but i believed--yes, lionel, i believed--that yours sought, we have every reason to hope,' said the count, smil so very subtle an essence, such an indefinable metaphysical so weak that death snaps it?" "the after life! ah, herrick, so, whether of woman or child, or art or music. our caresse . speak freely of my sentiments to lady jane, when i am gone spoken were exchanged between them; in fact, though constan still a traitor to france and me, and i am wretched forever still, despite the schoolmaster and the legislator, the pri still stronger than my sense of self-respect, i shall do so still the fountain of all endurance, and if ever a man love still the same--how can it not be?--and my worthiness is pu still to be depended upon, she will before long find a way strength as well as need. alexa was more able to live alone strong and patient: we can wait. o harold, exclaimed edith, strong as death,' but that's only a bit of some play-book, strong as death,--jealousy is cruel as the grave--the coals strong as death," said mary sedhurst's tomb. she knew bette strong as death. sorrow not as others that have no hope.'" strong as death. sorrow not as others that have no hope.' i strong as death." whether love divine or human she did not strong as death, you know," she added dreamily: "i think i strong as hate, and terrible as doom,--it is jealous, it ad stronger even than hatred and apprehension; and i find that stronger in me than faith--stronger than anything in heaven stronger. "martianus, the procurator, said: you are bewitch stronger than created love. god help my inconsistency! but stronger than death." as he flew along the heath to his lon stronger than death." the words were scarce out of his mout stronger than friendship." ## p. 31 (#37) ################# stronger than hate; and we shall stay all our days in this stronger than hate!" speech failed him; the cold agony of d stronger than my dislike;' and i would have been content." stronger than our love for others. now i never yet found fe stronger than pride.' philip fell to thinking; a generation stronger than self-interest. it is not your fortune we want stronger than the hate of a jilt--even if you did kill her. subjected to the certain curse of change. for my part, i sh such a blessing to some men, and such a curse to others!" e such a capricious thing, and so often bestowed upon the lea such a little thing beside his. what have i done to deserve such a simple thing when we have only one-and-twenty summer such a strong word, my dear." "it is not half strong enough such that still it sees too little or too much." --dryden. suffering tooyea, in the fulness of knowledge it suffers, i superior to idle suspicions; she thinks nobly of her friend supposed to be the motive on the man's side. how unjust, ho ." "suppose he should prove unworthy of her?" "that would be supreme are the rarest of all things. that for which humani surely, by her virtues as well as graces, an object for whi surely the early home of the heart. it came upon him so ple sure to receive in intercourse with the world. i cannot tel sweet, but upon love he had turned his back, poor fellow! g sweeter than much fame. if thou thinkest i have aught to pa t telling!" the voice of cleveland was deep, rich, and manly, tepid," she said to herself. she had kept up a regular corr terrible, but yet it is an emancipation in its way; and no , than a stalled ox and hatred therewith. "and how will it a , than the stalled ox and hatred therewith." volume one, cha , than the stalled ox and hatred therewith.' we'll thank god , than the stalled ox with hatred therewith." moreover, they ,' than to sit in the joyless ease of indifference amidst he that absorbing affection that prefers another's happiness t that blessed wand which wins the waters from the hardness o --that he has shut down and battened the pure fountain that that it delights in tangles and hidden ways; that it teache , that it does not take care of itself, but of the person lo that it may and must always be more. in a gravelly hollow, that it overlooks faults, and forgives even crimes." "i, at that it should be spontaneous. chapter vii. "a rose of a hu that lifts the being into such a serene air that it can fas that there is no escape from it. it has the same tension as , that they talk about. and behold me marched into smithfiel that which is, and was, and shall be for evermoreboundless, that which loves 'too well.' "from the time of my baby's bi that which says to a poor girl, come and share my misery, m that which would at any period of life have been the suprem that word! when diana goes to hell, her name changes to hec that you are holding so cheaply." "i beg your pardon, carol the the arch-devil's birth." the king rose, and strode his cham the beginning of hate. it happened, rather by lack of arran the best, no doubt; but it would be hard if to other sentim the brightest aspect of that bright thing the human counten the business of the idle, but the idleness of the busy. the the chief experience, and almost the only object, of a woma the creative presence, the centre, the source of life, yea the culmination of virtue." jenny knew what was in his mind the devilish--no more the human than the morrow's wormy mas the dismallest thing where the lover is quite honest. o, it the dram-drinking. when they returned, they found castrucci the earth that holde the father. he mounted to the rock above, and found the spo the final atonement, of which and for which the sacrifice o the first comforter, and where love and truth speak, the lo the genius of loving death. absorbed in the egotism of her the god of holiness also; that all sin, if unforgiven, must the grand occupation of a woman's life; and that, while in the greater of the two, yea, is the very heart of faith its the greatest of all hypocrites." "perhaps that is true," sa the greatest of encroachers--with that dear embrace, he mad the great revealer. i wonder if she is in love--to tell the the incense which doth sweeten earth." so sings trench. to their capital, in which all have an interest, and all a sha the k ta cure. parent of every vice. oh, what could mislead the last to perish. iv wreathe then the roses, wreathe the the law. he did not read much that was new, for he soon got the lo the lord and the slave of all! i thank thee, love, that tho the master passion of humanity, the main-spring of human ac the more glowing in proportion to the length of time in whi the most dunderheaded of all the passions; it never will li the most eloquent of advocates; and it is not to be wondere the most insignificant thing in most women's lives. it occu the most obdurate, the most unreasoning thing in the world. the most unholy of our institutions, and that is saying a g the mother of all duties and all virtues, and needs not be the nature of these favourites of fortune: from earliest in then immediately to be dropped?" emilia meditated. she caug . then the trial came on. before the day fixed had come roun the offspring of gratitude. and then when that gratitude is the offspring of idleness. when people have nothing to do, the one lovely thing in life. it is beauty, it is poetry. c the one sole dissipation of these student men, and, so to s the only arms that i shall oppose to my subjects. alas! tha the only crime that could deprive her of the most brilliant the only god--who would doubt his sovereignty, or grudge hi the only love worth having, because it is disinterested lov the only one that moulds the nature or elevates the heart! the only passion universally interesting. elizabeth's years the only subject i care to preach about; though, unlike man the only thing now left me upon earth.--she shall be mine, the only true marriage. very well!" he made a desperate ges the opener as well as closer of eyes. but men who, having s the open flower at l the open flower at last! i thank thee, love all round about the painter of existence, it should not be its sculptor." " the pall; ruler of the pall; ruler of heart and brain an the parent of brave actions. go, my noble youth--high-born the parent of justice, as well as of mercy. but implacable the pride of her esteem." such was the sentiment with which the r there between us. yet i will wipe away this blot upon thy h , there is eternity: one day he who is the householder of th the religion of a young man, and if it lead him not to wron there lost, mr. horry? do you think i could kep it on the p there that would stand a year's nursing of the object of hi the right stuff, or else they may produce ill-temper, regre the right word, like is so poor--you would love her, father the robe, and love the rock upon which our lives are generally built or wrecke the root that is burie . these are all the rights you have. you are young, and you the secret of the world: it is like the philosopher's stone the sole sincerity, and the world knows it, muffs it in the the son of my first husband. my second marriage has been a the soul of an irish dragoon!' by jove, i am as delighted t the soul of an irish dragoon." if i was not in the most per the soul of an irish dragoon!" i hallooed out, "power!" "eh the soul of an irish dragoon in battle, in bivouac, or in s the still worse reaction from the self-foiled and outworn g the strangest of all sentiments, and can indulge and condem the surest of human consolations ; and when trouble came ag the sweetest and most charming. if it has really any thing the tenderest thing known upo the tenderest thing known upon earth. occupied thus, christ the thing; and a teachableness of disposition in a young la the tide that comes a the tide that comes and goes; flowing and the tide that comes and goes; flowing and flowing it comes the universal church and heaven is everywhere. live in it; the very sublime of egotism, and people never weary of them the way to make a man of him, whether successful or not, an this that shows no pity? oh, my poor girl, don't look so sa throned!" she closed the book and sighed. marshall having f thus an end in itself, it must be believed to be the means thy guide, and white-robed charity walks by thy side,-if th thy love, my blessedness thy being.'" as margaret spoke, sh timid of raillery; and he feared even the gay spirit of his to a man's! i could commit crimes for you,and you can balan to be allured!" there was so much serious and earnest feeli to be an offence to her! monstrous--unjust!' suddenly they to be a slave. when the heart is cold then the hand is stro to be attended with such unhappy results as mine. i know no to be miserable." mrs. dodd retired, with her usual tact an to be on the sea, out of sight of land: to love a man like to be possessed? it is in the head--the heart--the blood--i to be possessed with madness, to lose all taste of life whe , to be sure! however, in that state, a dinner is no matter. to be the test: and if a lady ceases to love her husband... to be without doubt or fear. and roland thought he loved he to-day. deprecating, anxious, full of so many wistful besee to exist; so in that dark hour, in the gaspings of my agony to god and me, and made my heart swell with pride to hear h to have anything like the place in real life, that it has i to her a toy, clasped and unclasped so! in the pink hollow to love, with me; an engagement a solemn bond. with all my to make one mope like an owl, and sigh like the wind throug to me more than all of you'--and so say i at this moment. i to miss everything. life has but the mockery of consolation too feeble to bear the destruction of the ideal. but that i too good a thing to be lamented over, and this may turn int too grave a personage to bear a jest. he also knew enough o too highly placed to be happy in its issue." "and thou know too innocent to have devised for its formation ; still, whe too much akin to veneration to propose to you a clandestine too precious to be lost. i am going away from you all very too pure a sentiment to be so weighed in the balance. must too strong a term. i admire, esteem, and respect mademoisel too strong, it don't last long, as many have found to their too tender and too constant to fail; but you can make me ve to our life what the sun is to the world, and, though it se too young to know what conscience is, yet who knows not. co to see faults, not to be blind to them. the old reading is to take all he can get from a woman, and give her nothing i . to this pleasant home-scene there entered suddenly, ushere towards each other, and nothing can keep them apart." "will true: ah, if a maiden only knew!" "it is true: ah, if a maiden only knew!" "it is dear honey that is true and faithful, despite his knowledge of her dot, and he true,' and possibly, though her senses did not touch on it true love; i think so for several reasons, of which i needn trust--had led her half way forth from this maze of the int turned into carnal hatred is one of the most wonderful thin unaccountable. the solitude in which maltravers had lived, unacquainted with the force your lordship talks of, and fee unchanged. the passionate hope of three years ago still rul unchanged. whisper it to me, sweetest!" "when we meet again unconfined ; it emanates in the tenderest expressions, in a unfortunately one. "ernest," went on dorothy, "you remember unholy, it con taminates purity, and envenoms peace ; but a united with guilt, it becomes selfish and thinks only of th unselfish, edith. i tell you, dearest, that i die if i lose unsought, unvalued, uncared for, that nothing, not even all usually made--with warm words, assurances of affection, wit utterly hopeless, she puts all vague ideas of other lovers vanity; at *east, a fair moiety of hardress cregan's later very confiding, my sweet child," replied the knight. "and i very cruel." but then there came an exercise of reason whic very different from mine, or you couldn't hesitate a moment very pretty at seventeen, when the imagination is telling a very young yet, digby; and sometimes i can hardly believe a vicious which is given unsought, and is so strong a passion virtue, and so i worshipped virtue in loving thee. strength vitiating; and these two one-idea'd curs were ready to tear wanting: but i doubt if fear of a sister can be of any good warfare, three times out of four. anyway, it is for you to wasted and no promise forgotten!" again that mystic light p wasted either. it may seem so,--but it is not. and let us h what he has been used to.' this was on the last night of hi ." "what is it?" that icy question cooled her in an instant: what puzzles me,' said his lordship. 'i should as soon have what we choose to make it. regard it as a foolish pastime, when it comes to a head. marrow-bones! don't i know that th , who marry a man because they respect and like him, and are wisdom, vixen. in later life it means folly and drivelling, wise, oh, wh wise, oh, what could i refuse him?" "and love, our light at with a thousand woes pierced, which secure indifference nev with him, my father, but another name for folly. did i not , without doubt, yonder in the hills, and no bad refuge neit without end" its streams the whole creation reach, so plent without some such association. "striking the electric chain won, never fear but that his daughter's will come after; an worship; but it is hard to her to be sent away with her pre worship. i loved it for itself, not for anything it was to worth, and a bold burgess's to boot." chapter v. up! lady f worth." "i believe he loves me," murmured paulina, "after h worthless, as compared with a love that was no love at all? worth nothing--nothing if it does not believe itself to be worth possessing." "pshaw, huon! you know them not!" replie worth,' she said to herself. 'he cost her her life, and it worth some risk. every one knows my weakness; and did you f worth telling, even if it comes to nothing. i am not going worth that much, to call the girl whom he loves rosalind--r worth the whole br worth the whole broad earth; give that, you give us all!" " worth the whole broad earth; give that, you give us all!'" worthy of each other, that we disdain to make love a curse! worthy of love. when that is the true coin it should buy it wounded by their offspring, he felt vindictive, and was rea wounded. that contemplation of her incomparable beauty, wit writ in water, woman's faith is traced in sand." aytoun. da , yanna." "do you, rose?" "not unless i am in love with dick your love, my will is your will, my interest is your intere your's. be true to me. you need not have one doubt of me: i yours, now that my hand is promised to you, you have no rig you, though not all of you know it; ye are not love, yet ye , you would never wish her to lower herself by encouraging y , you would see it is the same. you wish him to see and know