Lord Ormont and His Aminta — Volume 4 by George Meredith
page 76 of 83 (91%)
page 76 of 83 (91%)
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Weyburn came back at the end of an hour to say that he had left the address with Mrs. May, whom he had seen. 'A handsome person,' the earl observed. 'She must have been very handsome,' said Weyburn. 'Ah! we fall into their fictions, or life would be a bald business, upon my word!' Lord Ormont had not uttered it before the sentiment of his greater luck with one of that queer world of the female lottery went through him on a swell of satisfaction, just a wave. An old-world eye upon women, it seemed to Weyburn. But the man who could crown a long term of cruel injustice with the harshness to his wife at Steignton would naturally behold women with that eye. However, he was allowed only to generalize; he could not trust himself to dwell on Lady Ormont and the Aminta inside the shell. Aminta and Lady Ormont might think as one or diversely of the executioner's blow she had undergone. She was a married woman, and she probably regarded the wedding by law as the end a woman has to aim at, and is annihilated by hitting; one flash of success, and then extinction, like a boy's cracker on the pavement. Not an elevated image, but closely resembling that which her alliance with Lord Ormont had been! At the same time, no true lover of a woman advises her--imploring is horrible treason--to slip the symbolic circle of the law from her finger, |
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