Capitolo 80
them in their old places. As they vaporized away, her Mrs. Lee
looked above the hill-side statement at the sun and the peaceful house, until her
you/he/she could see them anybody more, and the longest she looked, the less her
it was pleased with her. It was it true, as Victoria Dare said, that
could not you/he/she live in so pure an air? It did her it really needs the densest
smokes of the city? It was her, unknown to her; gradually
becoming contaminated with the life around her? or it was right Ratcliffe in
accepting together the good one and the bad one, and in the being of his/her time
was he him as? Because it was it, she said bitterly to her; that
what Washington has touched, he purified, also down to the
the associations of his/her house?
and because it is that what we touch seems dirty? Because I feel
dirty when I look awry at Vernon? Despite the Mr. Ratcliffe, is
it a child not to be and to cry for the moon and stars?
The small Baker that girl has come above where she was standing, and you/he/she started
playing with his/her parasol.
"Who is Your small friend?" Asked Ratcliffe.
Mrs. Lee rather vaguely responded that she was the daughter of that
beautiful woman in black; she believed that its name was Baker.
"Did baker, say?" Repeated Ratcliffe.
"Baker--Mrs. Sam Panettiere; at least so the Mr. Carrington told me; him
says her it was a the client of his."
In fact Ratcliffe saw soon Carrington go above to her and remains from
his/her side during the rest of the trip. Ratcliffe brusquely looked at them
and it grew more absorbed in his/her his/her own thoughts as the boat
drawn nearbyer and nearer the beach.
Carrington was in tall spirits. He thought that he had played cards his/her
with unusual success. Also the Girl to Give deigned him to admit his
charms that day.
You declared her/it to be the moral image of Martha Washington,
and she started a discussion if Carrington or God Dunbeg
it would be all right well her in the rĂ´le of the General.
"The Mr. Carrington is exemplary", she said, "but oh, that joy to be
Martha Washington and a Countess also!"