[The Woodlanders by Thomas Hardy]@TWC D-Link bookThe Woodlanders CHAPTER XLIII 16/23
Then why should you, by a piece of perverseness, bring down my gray hairs with sorrow to the grave ?" "If it were not for my husband--" she began, moved by his words.
"But how can I meet him there? How can any woman who is not a mere man's creature join him after what has taken place ?" "He would go away again rather than keep you out of my house." "How do you know that, father ?" "We met him on our way here, and he told us so," said Mrs.Melbury. "He had said something like it before.
He seems very much upset altogether." "He declared to her when he came to our house that he would wait for time and devotion to bring about his forgiveness," said her husband. "That was it, wasn't it, Lucy ?" "Yes.
That he would not intrude upon you, Grace, till you gave him absolute permission," Mrs.Melbury added. This antecedent considerateness in Fitzpiers was as welcome to Grace as it was unexpected; and though she did not desire his presence, she was sorry that by her retaliatory fiction she had given him a different reason for avoiding her.
She made no further objections to accompanying her parents, taking them into the inner room to give Winterborne a last look, and gathering up the two or three things that belonged to her.
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