The Amazing Marriage — Volume 3 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 115 pages of information about The Amazing Marriage — Volume 3.

The Amazing Marriage — Volume 3 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 115 pages of information about The Amazing Marriage — Volume 3.

And that did not appease the resentment tearing him from her, so justifiable then, as he forced himself to think, now hideous.  Glimpses of the pictures his deeds painted of him since his first meeting with this woman had to be shunned.  He threw them off; they were set down to the mystery men are.  The degrading, utterly different, back view of them teaches that Life is an irony.  If the teaching is not accepted, and we are to take the blame, can we bear to live?  Therefore, either way the irony of Life is proved.  Young men straining at thought, in the grip of their sensations, reach this logical conclusion.  They will not begin by examining the ground they stand on, and questioning whether they have consciences at peace with the steps to rearward.

Having established Life as the coldly malignant element, which induces to what it chastises, a loathing of womanhood, the deputed Mother of Life, ensues, by natural sequence.  And if there be one among women who disturbs the serenity we choose to think our due, she wears for us the sinister aspect of a confidential messenger between Nemesis and the Parcae.  Fleetwood was thus compelled to regard Carinthia as both originally and successively the cause of his internal as well as his exterior discomfort; otherwise those glimpses would have burnt into perpetual stigmas.  He had also to get his mind away from her.  They pleaded against him volubly with the rising of her image into it.

His manager at the mines had sent word of ominous discontent down there.  His presence might be required.  Obviously, then, the threatened place was unfitting for the Countess of Fleetwood.  He despatched a kind of order through Mr. Howell Edwards, that she should remove to Esslemont to escape annoyances.  Esslemont was the preferable residence.  She could there entertain her friends, could spend a pleasanter time there.

He waited for the reply; Edwards deferred it.

Were they to be in a struggle with her obstinate will once more?

Henrietta was preparing to leave London for her dismal, narrow, and, after an absence, desired love-nest.  The earl called to say farewell, cool as a loyal wife could wish him to be, admiring perforce.  Marriage and maternity withdrew nothing—­added to the fair young woman’s bloom.

She had gone to her room to pack and dress.  Livia received him.  In the midst of the casual commonplaces her memory was enlightened.

‘Oh,’ said she, and idly drew a letter out of a blottingpad, ’we have heard from Wales.’  She handed it to him.

Before he knew the thing he did, he was reading: 

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The Amazing Marriage — Volume 3 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.