[Put Yourself in His Place by Charles Reade]@TWC D-Link book
Put Yourself in His Place

CHAPTER XXV
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"They are both very superior to most of our Hillsborough friends." "Well, but did you not tell me he had quarreled with Mr.Raby ?" "No, not quarreled.

Mr.Raby offered to make him his heir: but he chooses to be independent, and make his own fortune, that's all." "Well, if you think our old friend would not take it amiss, invite them by all means.

I remember her a lovely woman." So the Littles were invited; and the young ladies admired Mr.Little on the whole, but sneered at him a little for gazing on Miss Carden, as if she was a divinity: the secret, which escaped the father, girls of seventeen detected in a minute, and sat whispering over it in the drawing-room.
After this invitation, Henry and his mother called, and then Grace called on Mrs.Little; and this was a great step for Henry, the more so as the ladies really took to each other.
The course of true love was beginning to run smooth, when it was disturbed by Mr.Coventry.
That gentleman's hopes had revived in London; Grace Carden had been very kind and friendly to him, and always in such good spirits, that he thought absence had cured her of Little, and his turn was come again.
The most experienced men sometimes mistake a woman in this way.

The real fact was that Grace, being happy herself, thanks to a daily letter from the man she adored, had not the heart to be unkind to another, whose only fault was loving her, and to whom she feared she had not behaved very well.

However, Mr.Coventry did mistake her.


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