[Paul Clifford<br> Complete by Edward Bulwer-Lytton]@TWC D-Link book
Paul Clifford
Complete

CHAPTER XIX
14/17

"If," said he, mentally, "I can effect this object,--if Mauleverer does marry this girl,--why so much the better that she has another, a fairer, and a more welcome lover.

By the great principle of scorn within me, which has enabled me to sneer at what weaker minds adore, and make a footstool of that worldly honour which fools set up as a throne, it would be to me more sweet than fame--ay, or even than power--to see this fine-spun lord a gibe in the mouths of men,--a cuckold, a cuckold!" and as he said the last word Brandon laughed outright.

"And he thinks, too," added he, "that he is sure of my fortune; otherwise, perhaps, he, the goldsmith's descendant, would not dignify our house with his proposals; but he may err there,--he may err there," and, finishing his soliloquy, Brandon finished also his letter by--"Adieu, my dear lord, your most affectionate friend"! It is not difficult to conjecture the effect produced upon Lucy by Brandon's letter.

It made her wretched; she refused for days to go out; she shut herself up in her apartment, and consumed the time in tears and struggles with her own heart.

Sometimes what she conceived to be her duty conquered, and she resolved to forswear her lover; but the night undid the labour of the day,--for at night, every night, the sound of her lover's voice, accompanied by music, melted away her resolution, and made her once more all tenderness and trust.


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