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The Absentee by Maria Edgeworth
Book, page 139 / 300


presence of mind have prevented all danger. Her ladyship WOULD
not understand the insult. She said, or she acted as if she
said, "JE NE VEUX RIEN VOIR, RIEN ECOUTER, RIEN SAVOIR." Lady
Oranmore is one of the most respectable--'

'Count, I beg your pardon!' interrupted Lady Dashfort; 'but I
must tell you that your favourite, Lady Oranmore, has behaved
very ill to me; purposely omitted to invite Isabel to her ball;
offended and insulted me:--her praises, therefore, cannot be the
most agreeable subject of conversation you can choose for my
amusement; and as to the rest, you, who have such variety and so
much politeness, will, I am sure, have the goodness to indulge my
caprice in this instance.'

I shall obey your ladyship, and be silent, whatever pleasure it
might give me to speak on that subject,' said the count; 'and I
trust Lady Dashfort will reward me by the assurance that, however
playfully she may have just now spoken, she seriously disapproves
and is shocked.'

'Oh, shocked! shocked to death! if that will satisfy you, my
dear count.'

The count, obviously, was not satisfied; he had civil, as well as
military courage, and his sense of right and wrong could stand
against the raillery and ridicule of a fine lady.

The conversation ended: Lady Dashfort thought it would have no
further consequences; and she did not regret the loss of a man
like Count O'Halloran, who lived retired in his castle, and who
could not have any influence upon the opinion of the fashionable
world. However, upon turning from the count to Lord Colambre,
who she thought had been occupied with Lady Isabel, and to whom
she imagined all this dispute was uninteresting, she perceived,
by his countenance, that she had made a great mistake. Still she
trusted that her power over Lord Colambre was sufficient easily
to efface whatever unfavourable impression this conversation had
made upon his mind. He had no personal interest in the affair;
and she had generally found that people are easily satisfied
about any wrong or insult, public or private, in which they have

 
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