[The Girl at Cobhurst by Frank Richard Stockton]@TWC D-Link bookThe Girl at Cobhurst CHAPTER XX 8/16
If he had been acquainted with the brother, the case would have been different, but that gentleman had not yet called upon him. Having thought some time on this subject, Ralph sat upright, and rearranged his reflections. "Why is it," he said to himself, "that I am so anxious to see her again, and to see her as soon as possible ?" To the solution of this question, Ralph applied the full force of his intellectual powers.
The conclusion that came to him after about six seconds of deliberation was not well defined, but it indicated that if almost any young man had had in his house--actually living with him and taking part in his household affairs--an unusually handsome young woman, who, not only by her appearance, but by her gentle and thoughtful desire to adapt herself to the tastes and circumstances of himself and his sister, seemed to belong in the place into which she had so suddenly dropped, that young man would naturally want to see that young woman just as soon as he could.
This would be so in any similar case, and there was no use in trying to find out why it was so in this case. He rose to his feet, and at that moment he heard Miriam calling to him. "Ralph," she said, running into the barn, "I have been looking all over for you.
The new woman cannot come to-day." "I do not see why you should appear so delighted about it," said Ralph; "I am very sorry to hear it." "And I am not," replied Miriam.
"There are some things I want to do before she comes, and I am very glad to have the chance.
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