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The Absentee by Maria Edgeworth
Book, page 51 / 300


Much must be allowed for an inflammation in the eyes, and
something for a rheumatic fever; yet it may seem strange that
Lady Clonbrony should be so blind and deaf as neither to see nor
hear all this time; that, having lived so long in the world, it
should never occur to her that it was rather imprudent to have a
young lady, not eighteen, nursing her--and such a young lady!--
when her son, not one-and-twenty--and such a son!--came to visit
her daily. But, so it was. Lady Clonbrony knew nothing of love
--she had read of it, indeed, in novels, which sometimes for
fashion's sake she had looked at, and over which she had been
obliged to doze; but this was only love in books--love in real
life she had never met with--in the life she led, how should she?
She had heard of its making young people, and old people even, do
foolish things; but those were foolish people; and if they were
worse than foolish, why it was shocking, and nobody visited them.
But Lady Clonbrony had not, for her own part, the slightest,
notion how people could be brought to this pass, nor how anybody
out of Bedlam could prefer to a good house, a decent equipage,
and a proper establishment, what is called love in a cottage. As
to Colambre, she had too good an opinion of his understanding--to
say nothing of his duty to his family, his pride, his rank, and
his being her son--to let such an idea cross her imagination. As
to her niece; in the first place, she was her niece, and first
cousins should never marry, because they form no new connexions
to strengthen the family interest, or raise its consequence.
This doctrine her ladyship had repeated for years so often and so
dogmatically, that she conceived it to be incontrovertible, and
of as full force as any law of the land, or as any moral or
religious obligation. She would as soon have suspected her niece
of an intention of stealing her diamond necklace as of purloining
Colambre's heart, or marrying this heir of the house of
Clonbrony.

Miss Nugent was so well apprised, and so thoroughly convinced of
all this, that she never for one moment allowed herself to think
of Lord Colambre as a lover. Duty, honour, and gratitude--
gratitude, the strong feeling and principle of her mind--forbade
it; she had so prepared and habituated herself to consider him as
a person with whom she could not possibly be united that, with
perfect ease and simplicity, she behaved towards him exactly as

 
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