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An Ambitious Man by Ella Wheeler Wilcox
page 42 of 154 (27%)
a condition of things which pleased the Judge as much as it made his
son-in-law miserable.

With a malicious adroitness possible only to such a woman as the
second Mrs Lawrence, she endeared herself to Mrs Cheney, by a
thousand flattering and caressing ways, and by a constant exhibition
of sympathy, which to a weak and selfish nature is as pleasing as it
is distasteful to the proud and strong. And by this inexhaustible
flow of sympathetic feeling, she caused the wife to drift farther and
farther away from her husband's influence, and to accuse him of all
manner of shortcomings and faults which had not suggested themselves
to her own mind.

Mabel had not given or demanded a devoted love when she married
Preston Cheney. She was quite satisfied to bear his name, and do the
honours of his house, and to be let alone as much as possible. It
was the name, not the estate, of wifehood she desired; and motherhood
she had accepted with reluctance and distaste.

Never was a more undesired or unwelcome child born than her daughter
Alice, and the helpless infant shared with its father the resentful
anger which dominated her unwilling mother the wretched months before
its advent into earth life.

To be let alone and allowed to follow her own whims and desires, and
never to be crossed in any wish, was all Mrs Cheney asked of her
husband.

This role was one he had very willingly permitted her to pursue,
since with every passing week and month he found less and less to win
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