Harriet A. Adams
Capitolo 57
"No; it is stuff more austere than it reasons more; they is more good-looking them
perceptions, and it instinctively feels on their way in questions
what we work and we resolve from from a lot of reasoning alone."
"I believe that it is this way."
"Then you have advanced a footstep. We cannot also appreciate woman
extremely. That many make foolish things it is not anybody test that many are not
wise and good crosses, that it brings day after day what they would do her
and me ready to lie down and die-they ever makes the great things, or
good or I win, and men, I hope, following desire of the place in the daytime his/her image to
his/her creator, and it reputes him/it as to him the more saint and taller on
earth-the better gift of God."
"Because, Hugh, you are wild on this subject."
"I am awake, and it hopes that I will never sleep."
"Your words have given me rest, and it mixed my better emotions. I want
writes to the to-night of Mabel. But yesterday and me we felt that all the women
it was inconstant as these waters. I am changed, and Your comments have
causes me to differently think.
"I have not changed Your idea, I have only brought some of Your
the best feelings to the surface."
"And is thing that but change?"
"You/he/she can be, that is. Face you don't see that anything mightier than
You brought here her, where Your soft feelings will pass
away,--although I don't wonder that you felt as you did, not even me
You blame her. The human soul has many sides, and it slowly turns to the
light."
"If I had Your penetration, I could bear the discords of the life."
"We not only have to learn to bear them, but to gather the wisdom from
their teachings. If we cannot grow under the test of to-day, us certainly
not under to-tomorrow."
"I start to feel that us both they will be best for this
estrangement."
"You want, and it come together, on a taller airplane. Gotten married people live
in so near relationships that each is absorbed from the other, and
having then nothing coolness to give, what was once the attraction it becomes
repulsion. I so clearly see these things me that the criticism,