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"Youat him
"I will do so to-morrow if a way can be found by which she shall not become Countess of Scroope"
"That is, he willher his wife," said the priest "He will jump over a broomstick with her and will ask s and hers may be spared for a week or so Mrs O'Hara, he is a villain,--a vile, heartless, cowardly reprobate, so low in the scale of hu to hilish peer! Peer to what? Certainly to no one worthy to be called a , the priest addressed himself to Mrs O'Hara, but as he spoke his eyes were fixed full on the face of the young lord
"I will have his heart out of his body," exclaimed Mrs O'Hara
"Heart;--he has no heart You may touch his pocket;--or his pride, what he calls his pride, a dabear of a title by which he trusts to cover his baseness; or his skin, for he is a coward Do you see his cheek now? But as for his heart,--you cannot get at that"
"I will get at his life," said the woman
"Mr Marty, you allow yourself a liberty of speech which even your priesthood will not warrant"
"Lay a hand upon h about you to do it Were it not that the poor child has been wake and too trusting, I would bid her spit on you rather than take you for her husband" Then he paused, but only for a moment "Sir, you must marry her, and there must be an end of it In no other way can you be allowed to live"
"Would you murder me?"
"I would crush you like an insect beneath ht what murder is;--that there are ht of the life of that young girl who now bears in her womb the fruit of your body? Would you ave you all simply because you asked her; and then think of your own life? As the God of Heaven is above me, and sees me now, and the Saviour in whose blood I trust, I would lay down my life this instant, if I could save her fro he too turned away his face and wept like a child