[East Lynne by Mrs. Henry Wood]@TWC D-Link bookEast Lynne CHAPTER II 11/13
The brilliant rooms were to her as an enchanting scene of dreamland, for her heart was in its springtide of early freshness, and the satiety of experience had not come.
How could she remember trouble, even the broken cross, as she bent to the homage offered her and drank in the honeyed words poured forth into her ear? "Halloo!" cried an Oxford student, with a long rent-roll in prospective, who was screwing himself against the wall, not to be in the way of the waltzers, "I thought you had given up coming to these places ?" "So I had," replied the fast nobleman addressed, the son of a marquis. "But I am on the lookout, so am forced into them again.
I think a ball-room the greatest bore in life." "On the lookout for what ?" "For a wife.
My governor has stopped supplies, and has vowed by his beard not to advance another shilling, or pay a debt, till I reform.
As a preliminary step toward it, he insists upon a wife, and I am trying to choose one for I am deeper in debt than you imagine." "Take the new beauty, then." "Who is she ?" "Lady Isabel Vane." "Much obliged for the suggestion," replied the earl.
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