[The Adventures of Harry Richmond by George Meredith]@TWC D-Link bookThe Adventures of Harry Richmond CHAPTER XXII 6/29
Our duties cannot ever be clear to us until we do.
It is possible for headstrong wilfulness and secret tenderness to go together. Think whether she is capable of sacrifice before you compel her to it. Do not inflict misery wantonly.
One would like to see her.
Harry, I brood on your future; that is why I seem to you preternaturally anxious about you.' She seemed to me preternaturally anxious about Miss Penrhys. My father listened in silence to my flippant satire on women's letters. He answered after a pause, 'Our Jorian says that women's letters must be read like anagrams.
To put it familiarly, they are like a child's field of hop-scotch.
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