Page 45 (1/2)
She took that na that
Daisy was far too girlish an appellation for one who clad herself almost
in eeds, and felt, when she stood at poor Torave, more
wretched and desolate than ht
Tom had meant to make her parents independent of her so that she need
not have the Mr
McDonald as he did, he thought she would be happier alone, but God so
ordered it that within three rave beside his, and Daisy and her -time now, and the two desolate woland, and fro the heather hills they passed the summer in the utht, which dwelt mostly upon the past
and the happiness she cast ahen she consented to the sundering of
the tie which had bound her to Guy Thornton
"Oh, how could I have been so foolish and so weak," she said, as, with
intense contempt for herself, she read over the journal she had kept at
El the first weeks of her married life
Guy had said it would be pleasant for her to refer to its pages in after
years, little dreauish of heart poor Daisy would