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Chapter 10 Hard Words

Word Count: 2241    |    Released on: 18/11/2017

ey themselves have been the cause. The author is not speaking now of actual love-makings, of intrigues and devilish villany, either perpetrated or imagined; but

mself probably, unconsciously indeed, and with no formed words, that the husband is an ass, an ass if he be in a twitter either for that which he has kept or for that which he has been unable to keep, that the lady has shewn a good deal of appreciation, and that he himself is is is quite a Captain Bold of Halifax! All the while he will not have the slightest intention of wronging the husband's honour, and will have received no greater favour from the intimacy accorded to him than the privilege of running on one day to Marshall and Snellgrove's, the haberdashers, and on another to Handcocks', the jewel

has to give, could hardly have wished to run away with his neighbour's wife, or to have destroyed the happiness of his old friend's daughter. Such wickedness had never come into his head; but he had a certain pleasure in being the confidential friend of a very pretty woman; and when he heard that that pretty woman's husband was jealous, the pleasure was enhanced rather than otherwise. On that Sunday, as he had left the house in Curzon S

in hand whose time was of the slightest value to himself or any one else. But now that mission assumed an importance in his eyes, and seemed to require either a special observance or a special excuse. There was no real reason why he should not have sta

ny, M

r E

t wicked, do tell me whether I am to consider myself as a banished man. I thought that our little meetings were so innocent and so pleasan

lways h

.

er that I consider myself always entitled to b

had been very doubtful. In regard to the number of words, Mrs Trevelyan certainly had had the best of it. As far as any understanding one of another was concerned, the conversation had been useless. She believed herself to be injured and aggrieved, and would continue so to assert, let him implore her to listen to him as loudly as he might. 'Yes I will listen, and

ger against her husband. If he laid any command upon her, she would execute it; but she would never cease to tell him that h

intelligible order to the contrary. She was fortifying her mind with this resolution when Colonel Osborne's letter was brought to her. She asked whether any servant was waiting for an an

Colonel

nk of it. As far as I am concerned, I wish for no change except that people should be more reasonable.

ost sin

Trev

the words of

the letter should be posted. But she destroyed that which she had received from Colonel Osborne. In all things she would act as she would h

ch he himself was accustomed to occupy behind the parlour, and as he did s

uage he could use as to the unseemliness of her intimacy with Colonel Osborne; and then, the first thing she had done when his back was turned was to write to this very Colonel Osborne, and tell him, no doubt, what had occurred between her and her husband. He sat thinking of it all for many minutes. He would probably have declared himself th

d her away?' sa

ew minutes. Since what I said to you this mo

you have found it out; but I

came into the house, I saw y

ould have read it

u to be on your guard in what you say. I will bear much for you, and m

part,' said Mrs Trevelyan, rising from her chair, and conf

slowly. 'But in the first place I wish you to

ame in, no doubt it is ther

I have desired you to tell

o insignificant in my own justification. If you suspect me of writing w

rom Colonel Osbor

hav

re is hi

destro

opposite to him, confronting him with the scorn of her bright angry eyes. Of course, he was n

ng away towards the door. 'If you want to p

call m

you are a husband, is the privilege of

is. My present orders to you are not to see Colonel Osborne, not to write to him or have any communication with him, and to

l go

your p

ill make no promise exacted from

use to o

othing, and will

I will take care that you shall he

passing through the hall, saw th

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Contents

Chapter 1 Shewing How Wrath Began Chapter 2 Colonel Osborne Chapter 3 Lady Milborough's Dinner Party Chapter 4 Hugh Stanbury Chapter 5 Shewing How the Quarrel Progressed Chapter 6 Shewing How Reconciliation was Made Chapter 7 Miss Jemima Stanbury, of Exeter Chapter 8 'I Know it Will Do' Chapter 9 Shewing How the Quarrel Progressed Again Chapter 10 Hard Words Chapter 11 Lady Milborough as Ambassador
Chapter 12 Miss Stanbury's Generosity
Chapter 13 The Honourable Mr Glascock
Chapter 14 The Clock House at Nuncombe Putney
Chapter 15 What They Said About it in the Close
Chapter 16 Dartmoor
Chapter 17 A Gentleman Comes to Nuncombe Putney
Chapter 18 The Stanbury Correspondence
Chapter 19 Bozzle, the Ex-Policeman
Chapter 20 Shewing How Colonel Osborne Went to Cockchaffingto
Chapter 21 Shewing How Colonel Osborne Went to Nuncombe Putne
Chapter 22 Shewing How Miss Stanbury Behaved to Her Two Niece
Chapter 23 Colonel Osborne and Mr Bozzle Return to London
Chapter 24 Niddon Park
Chapter 25 Hugh Stanbury Smokes His Pipe
Chapter 26 A Third Party is So Objectionable
Chapter 27 Mr Trevelyan's Letter to His Wife
Chapter 28 Great Tribulation
Chapter 29 Mr and Mrs Outhouse
Chapter 30 Dorothy Makes up Her Mind
Chapter 31 Mr Brooke Burgess
Chapter 32 The 'Full Moon' at St. Diddulph's
Chapter 33 Hugh Stanbury Smokes Another Pipe
Chapter 34 Priscilla's Wisdom
Chapter 35 Mr Gibson's Good Fortune
Chapter 36 Miss Stanbury's Wrath
Chapter 37 Mont Cenis
Chapter 38 Verdict of the Jury 'Mad, My Lord'
Chapter 39 Miss Nora Rowley is Maltreated
Chapter 40 'C. G.'
Chapter 41 Shewing what Took Place at St Diddulph's
Chapter 42 Miss Stanbury and Mr Gibson Become Two
Chapter 43 Laburnum Cottage
Chapter 44 Brooke Burgess Takes Leave of Exeter
Chapter 45 Trevelyan at Venice
Chapter 46 The American Minister
Chapter 47 About Fishing, and Navigation, and Head-Dresses
Chapter 48 Mr Gibson is Punished
Chapter 49 Mr Brooke Burgess After Supper
Chapter 50 Camilla Triumphant
Chapter 51 Shewing what Happened During Miss Stanbury's Ill
Chapter 52 Mr Outhouse Complains that It's Hard
Chapter 53 Hugh Stanbury is Shewn to Be No Conjuror
Chapter 54 Mr Gibson's Threat
Chapter 55 The Republican Browning
Chapter 56 Withered Grass
Chapter 57 Dorothy's Fate
Chapter 58 Dorothy at Home
Chapter 59 Mr Bozzle at Home
Chapter 60 Another Struggle
Chapter 61 Parker's Hotel, Mowbray Street
Chapter 62 Lady Rowley Makes an Attempt
Chapter 63 Sir Marmaduke at Home
Chapter 64 Sir Marmaduke at His Club
Chapter 65 Mysterious Agencies
Chapter 66 Of a Quarter of Lamb
Chapter 67 River's Cottage
Chapter 68 Major Magruder's Committee
Chapter 69 Sir Marmaduke at Willesden
Chapter 70 Shewing what Nora Rowley Thought About Carriages
Chapter 71 Shewing what Hugh Stanbury Thought About the Duty
Chapter 72 The Delivery of the Lamb
Chapter 73 Dorothy Returns to Exeter
Chapter 74 The Lioness Aroused
Chapter 75 The Rowleys Go Over the Alps
Chapter 76 'We Shall Be So Poor'
Chapter 77 The Future Lady Peterborough
Chapter 78 Casalunga
Chapter 79 'I Can Sleep on the Boards'
Chapter 80 'Will They Despise Him'
Chapter 81 Mr Glascock is Master
Chapter 82 Mrs French's Carving Knife
Chapter 83 Bella Victrix
Chapter 84 Self-Sacrifice
Chapter 85 The Baths of Lucca
Chapter 86 Mr Glascock as Nurse
Chapter 87 Mr Glascock's Marriage Completed
Chapter 88 Cropper and Burgess
Chapter 89 'I Wouldn't Do It, If I was You'
Chapter 90 Lady Rowley Conquered
Chapter 91 Four O'clock in the Morning
Chapter 92 Trevelyan Discourses on Life
Chapter 93 'Say that You Forgive Me'
Chapter 94 A Real Christian
Chapter 95 Trevelyan Back in England
Chapter 96 Monkhams
Chapter 97 Mrs Brooke Burgess
Chapter 98 Acquitted
Chapter 99 Conclusion
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