FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3104   3105   3106   3107   3108   3109   3110   3111   3112   3113   3114   3115   3116   3117   3118   3119   3120   3121   3122   3123   3124   3125   3126   3127   3128  
3129   3130   3131   3132   3133   3134   3135   3136   3137   3138   3139   3140   3141   3142   3143   3144   3145   3146   3147   3148   3149   3150   3151   >>  
ntil you find a proper occasion yourself to acquaint him with your wishes." "What!" said the duchess, "would you advise me, Hobart--you, who really love me--to engage in an affair of this nature, at the expense of my honour, and the hazard of a thousand inconveniences! If such frailties are sometimes excusable, they certainly are not so in the high station in which I am placed; and it would be an ill-requital on my part for his goodness who raised me to the rank I now fill to----" "All this is very fine," interrupted Miss Hobart: "but is it not very well known that he only married you because he was importuned so to do? Since that I refer to yourself whether he has ever restrained his inclination a single moment, giving you the most convincing proofs of the change that has taken place in his heart, by a thousand provoking infidelities? Is it still your intention to persevere in a state of indolence and humility, whilst the duke, after having received the favours, or suffered the repulses, of all the coquettes in England, pays his addresses to the maids of honour, one after the other, and at present places his whole ambition and desires in the conquest of that ugly skeleton, Churchill? What! Madam, must then your prime of life be spent in a sort of widowhood in deploring your misfortunes, without ever being permitted to make use of any remedy that may offer? A woman must be endowed with insuperable patience, or with an inexhaustible degree of resignation, to bear this. Can a husband, who disregards you both night and day, really suppose, because his wife eats and drinks heartily, as, God be thanked, your royal highness does, that she wants nothing else than to sleep well too? Faith, such conduct is too bad: I therefore once more repeat that there is not a princess in the universe who would refuse the homage of a man like Sidney, when a husband pays his addresses elsewhere." These reasons were certainly not morally good; but had they been still worse the duchess would have yielded to them, so much did her heart act in concert with Miss Hobart, to overthrow her discretion and prudence. This intrigue began at the very time that Miss Hobart advised Miss Temple not to give any encouragement to the addresses of the handsome Sidney. As for him, no sooner was he informed by the confidant Hobart that the goddess accepted his adoration than he immediately began to be particularly reserved and circumspect in his behaviour, in ord
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3104   3105   3106   3107   3108   3109   3110   3111   3112   3113   3114   3115   3116   3117   3118   3119   3120   3121   3122   3123   3124   3125   3126   3127   3128  
3129   3130   3131   3132   3133   3134   3135   3136   3137   3138   3139   3140   3141   3142   3143   3144   3145   3146   3147   3148   3149   3150   3151   >>  



Top keywords:
Hobart
 
addresses
 
Sidney
 

husband

 

thousand

 

duchess

 

honour

 
remedy
 

highness

 
thanked

adoration

 

conduct

 

immediately

 

heartily

 
reserved
 

resignation

 

circumspect

 

degree

 

behaviour

 

insuperable


patience

 

inexhaustible

 

disregards

 

drinks

 
endowed
 
suppose
 
yielded
 

handsome

 
encouragement
 

advised


intrigue

 
prudence
 
Temple
 

concert

 
overthrow
 

discretion

 

refuse

 

homage

 

universe

 

princess


accepted

 

repeat

 

goddess

 
confidant
 

informed

 
sooner
 

morally

 

reasons

 

England

 

raised