[Father Stafford by Anthony Hope]@TWC D-Link book
Father Stafford

CHAPTER IX
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Reproaches had never stirred him to exertion; ridicule would not stop him now.

He took leave to add himself to the materials for slightly contemptuous amusement that the world had hitherto afforded him, and he found his own absurd actions a very sensible addition to his resources.

He realized why people who never act on impulse and never do uncalled-for things are not only dull to others, but suffer boredom themselves.

However the Millstead love-affairs affected the principal actors, there can be no question that they relieved Sir Roderick Ayre from _ennui_ for a considerable number of months and exercised a very wholesome effect on a man who had come to take pride in his own miserable incapacity for honest emotion.
He rose the next morning as nearly with the lark as could reasonably be expected; more nearly with the lark than the domestic staff of the Badischerhof at all approved of.

Was not Kate Bernard in the habit of taking the waters at half-past seven?
And in solitude?
For Haddington's devotion was not allowed by him to interfere with that early ride which is so often a mark of legislators, and an assertion, I suppose, of the strain on their minds that might be ignored or doubted if not backed up by some such evidence.


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