[Eleanor by Mrs. Humphry Ward]@TWC D-Link book
Eleanor

CHAPTER IX
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Then it grows in my mind gradually, it becomes a weight--a burning fire--and drives everything else out.

I hate the men, for instance, that I hated last year in England, much worse now than I did then!' She bit her lip, but could not help the broadening smile, to which his own responded.
'Do you take any interest, Miss Foster, in what happened to me last year ?' 'I often wonder whether you regret it,' she said, rather shyly.

'Wasn't it--a great pity ?' 'Not at all,' he said peremptorily; 'I shall recover all I let slip.' She did not reply.

But the smile still trembled on her lips, while she copied his favourite trick in stripping the leaves from a spray of box.
'You don't believe that ?' 'Does one ever recover all one lets slip--especially in politics ?' 'Goodness--you are a pessimist! Why should one not recover it ?' Her charming mouth curved still more gaily.
'I have often heard my uncle say that the man who "resigns" is lost.' 'Ah!--never regret--never resign--never apologise?
We know that creed.

Your uncle must be a man of trenchant opinions.


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