[The Absentee by Maria Edgeworth]@TWC D-Link bookThe Absentee CHAPTER VII 1/23
CHAPTER VII. Our hero was quite convinced of the good sense of his friend's last remark, that it is safer to judge of people by their conduct to others than by their manners towards ourselves; but as yet, he felt scarcely any interest on the subject of Lady Dashfort or Lady Isabel's characters; however, he inquired and listened to all the evidence he could obtain respecting this mother and daughter. He heard terrible reports of the mischief they had done in families; the extravagance into which they had led men; the imprudence, to say no worse, into which they had betrayed women.
Matches broken off, reputations ruined, husbands alienated from their wives, and wives made jealous of their husbands.
But in some of these stories he discovered exaggeration so flagrant as to make him doubt the whole; in others, it could not be positively determined whether the mother or daughter had been the person most to blame. Lord Colambre always followed the charitable rule of believing only half what the world says, and here he thought it fair to believe which half he pleased.
He further observed, that, though all joined in abusing these ladies in their absence, when present they seemed universally admired.
Though everybody cried 'Shame!' and 'shocking!' yet everybody visited them.
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