Phineas Finn - The Irish Member by Anthony Trollope
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page 26 of 955 (02%)
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"I don't know why I let you talk to me in this way. There has never
been anything between me and Phineas,--your brother I mean." "I know whom you mean very well." "And I feel quite sure that there never will be. Why should there? He'll go out among great people and be a great man; and I've already found out that there's a certain Lady Laura Standish whom he admires very much." "Lady Laura Fiddlestick!" "A man in Parliament, you know, may look up to anybody," said Miss Mary Flood Jones. "I want Phin to look up to you, my dear." "That wouldn't be looking up. Placed as he is now, that would be looking down; and he is so proud that he'll never do that. But come down, dear, else they'll wonder where we are." Mary Flood Jones was a little girl about twenty years of age, with the softest hair in the world, of a colour varying between brown and auburn,--for sometimes you would swear it was the one and sometimes the other; and she was as pretty as ever she could be. She was one of those girls, so common in Ireland, whom men, with tastes that way given, feel inclined to take up and devour on the spur of the moment; and when she liked her lion, she had a look about her which seemed to ask to be devoured. There are girls so cold-looking,--pretty girls, too, ladylike, discreet, and armed with all accomplishments,--whom to |
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