[Barchester Towers by Anthony Trollope]@TWC D-Link book
Barchester Towers

CHAPTER XIX
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Yet with all this he seldom showed much outward sign of trouble.
It was the same with the mother.

If she added little to the pleasures of her children, she detracted still less: she neither grumbled at her lot, nor spoke much of her past or future sufferings; as long as she had a maid to adjust her dress, and had those dresses well made, nature with her was satisfied.

It was the same with the children.
Charlotte never rebuked her father with the prospect of their future poverty, nor did it seem to grieve her that she was becoming an old maid so quickly; her temper was rarely ruffled, and, if we might judge by her appearance, she was always happy.

The signora was not so sweet-tempered, but she possessed much enduring courage; she seldom complained--never, indeed, to her family.

Though she had a cause for affliction which would have utterly broken down the heart of most women as beautiful as she and as devoid of all religious support, yet she bore her suffering in silence, or alluded to it only to elicit the sympathy and stimulate the admiration of the men with whom she flirted.


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