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The Absentee by Maria Edgeworth
Book, page 140 / 300


no immediate concern. But all the charms of her conversation
were now tried in vain to reclaim him from the reverie into which
he had fallen.

His friend Sir James Brooke's parting advice occurred to our
hero; his eyes began to open to Lady Dashfort's character; and he
was, from this moment, freed from her power. Lady Isabel,
however, had taken no part in all this--she was blameless; and,
independently of her mother, and in pretended opposition of
sentiment, she might have continued to retain the influence she
had gained over Lord Colambre, but that a slight accident
revealed to him her real disposition.

It happened, on the evening of this day, that Lady Isabel came
into the library with one of the young ladies of the house,
talking very eagerly, without perceiving Lord Colambre, who was
sitting in one of the recesses reading.

'My dear creature, you are quite mistaken,' said Lady Isabel, 'he
was never a favourite of mine; I always detested him; I only
flirted with him to plague his wife. Oh that wife, my dear
Elizabeth, I do hate!' cried she, clasping her hands, and
expressing hatred with all her soul and with all her strength.
'I detest that Lady de Cresey to such a degree, that, to purchase
the pleasure of making her feel the pangs of jealousy for one
hour, look, I would this moment lay down this finger and let it
be cut off.'

The face, the whole figure of Lady Isabel at this moment appeared
to Lord Colambre suddenly metamorphosed; instead of the soft,
gentle, amiable female, all sweet charity and tender sympathy,
formed to love and to be loved, he beheld one possessed and
convulsed by an evil spirit--her beauty, if beauty it could be
called, the beauty of a fiend. Some ejaculation, which he
unconsciously uttered, made Lady Isabel start. She saw him--saw
the expression of his countenance, and knew that all was over.

Lord Colambre, to the utter astonishment and disappointment of
Lady Dashfort, and to the still greater mortification of Lady
Isabel, announced this night that it was necessary he should

 
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