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

CHAPTER IX
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A coronet, however, was a pretty ornament, and if it could solace a poor cripple to have such on her card, who would begrudge it to her?
Of her husband, or of his individual family, she never spoke, but with her admirers she would often allude in a mysterious way to her married life and isolated state, and, pointing to her daughter, would call her the last of the blood of the emperors, thus referring Neroni's extraction to the old Roman family from which the worst of the Caesars sprang.
The "signora" was not without talent and not without a certain sort of industry; she was an indomitable letter-writer, and her letters were worth the postage: they were full of wit, mischief, satire, love, latitudinarian philosophy, free religion, and, sometimes, alas, loose ribaldry.

The subject, however, depended entirely on the recipient, and she was prepared to correspond with anyone but moral young ladies or stiff old women.

She wrote also a kind of poetry, generally in Italian, and short romances, generally in French.

She read much of a desultory sort of literature, and as a modern linguist had really made great proficiency.

Such was the lady who had now come to wound the hearts of the men of Barchester.
Ethelbert Stanhope was in some respects like his younger sister, but he was less inestimable as a man than she as a woman.


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