[My Lady Ludlow by Elizabeth Gaskell]@TWC D-Link book
My Lady Ludlow

CHAPTER V
16/27

Let me go!' "'What were her words ?' Madame de Crequy replied, slowly, as if forcing her memory to the extreme of accuracy.

'My cousin,' she said, 'when I marry, I marry a man, not a petit-maitre.

I marry a man who, whatever his rank may be will add dignity to the human race by his virtues, and not be content to live in an effeminate court on the traditions of past grandeur.' She borrowed her words from the infamous Jean-Jacques Rousseau, the friend of her scarce less infamous father--nay! I will say it,--if not her words, she borrowed her principles.

And my son to request her to marry him!' "'It was my father's written wish,' said Clement.
"'But did you not love her?
You plead your father's words,--words written twelve years before,--and as if that were your reason for being indifferent to my dislike to the alliance.

But you requested her to marry you,--and she refused you with insolent contempt; and now you are ready to leave me,--leave me desolate in a foreign land--' "'Desolate! my mother! and the Countess Ludlow stands there!' "'Pardon, madame! But all the earth, though it were full of kind hearts, is but a desolation and a desert place to a mother when her only child is absent.


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