[From the Housetops by George Barr McCutcheon]@TWC D-Link book
From the Housetops

CHAPTER V
3/45

Needless to say, George was now looked upon in the small family as a liability.

He was a never-present help in time of trouble.

The worst thing about him was his obstinate regard for the young woman who still bore his name but was no longer his wife.

At twenty-four he looked upon himself as a man who had nothing to live for.

He spent most of his time gnashing his teeth because the pretty little divorcee was receiving the attentions of young gentlemen in his own set, without the slightest hint of opposition on the part of their parents, while he was obliged to look on from afar off.
It appears that parents do not object to young women of insufficient lineage provided the said young women keep at a safe distance from the marriage altar.
It is interesting to note in this connection, however, that little Mrs.
George Tresslyn was a model of propriety despite her sprightly explorations of a world that had been strange to her up to the time she was cast into it by a disgusted mother-in-law, and it is still more interesting to find that she nourished a sly hope that some day George would kick over the traces in a very manly fashion and marry her all over again! Be that as it may, the bereft and humiliated George favoured his mother and sister with innumerable half-hours in which they had to contend with scornful and exceedingly bitter opinions on the iniquity of marriage as it is practised among the elect.


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