Capitolo 86
austere prohibition of his/her parents. Man was her continuous tenour
thoughts; but a moment of the excited feeling betrayed that that she had
held it would never pass his/her lips.
But a very little days had passed since the departure of Edward by Oakwood
when, one afternoon, the Mr. Hamilton entered the usual session-room of the
family, evidently very disturbed. Mrs. Hamilton and Ellen were busy
in job, and Emmeline sat to a small table in the splay of one of
the windows of deep gothic, busily assumed silently still it seemed in
drawing. You knew that his/her father had gone that morning to the village, and
as usual felt uncomfortable and feverish, fearing, reasonably or unreasonably,
what on his/her return she would feel anything pertaining to unpleasant
Arthur; as her this day marked the expression of his/her father its heart,
beaten, and his/her cheek of which the text had been lined up by the action
bending himself/herself/itself, it also turned pale to death.
"What misadventure has happened in the village, that you seem so serious, my darling
with love?" exact his/her wife, happily.
"I am made perplexed in that matter to act, and it was distressed, deeply it was distressed, to
the intelligence that I have learned; not only that my prejudice is
inveterate, but that the knowledge that I have acquired pertaining to that
the unhappy youth puts me in a more awkward situation."
"You is not speaking very intelligibly, my dear husband, and therefore
I have to guess what you mean; I fear that I/you/he/she am young Myrvin of whom You
you speak", Mrs. said Hamilton, his/her gone festiveness.
"Are not you/they bringing him/it direct to his/her disrepute again certainly?"
Observed Ellen, sincerely. "The young poor man goes far street; because he/she wants
them anchor prejudice endeavour the and You Mr. Howard against him?"
"I admire Your charity, my dear girl but, I am sorry to say, in this
case that is unworthily given. They are now done there come to light that,
I fear, unpleasant as it will be the assignment, makes him/it my duty to write to