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"I know not I must think--"
"I am ashamed of you! In the name of all that is honourable, what is there to think about? Have you told this Miss Moran that you love her?"
"Not in precise words I have only seen her three or four times"
"Then, sir, you have only YOURSELF to think about Have I a son with so little proper feeling that he needs to think a e, it is high tihbourhood of your randparents, and your flatterers in the city, you never get beyond the atmosphere of your ohims and fancies This conversation has co worth talking about"
"Sir, you are more cruel and unreasonable than I could believe possible"
"The railings of a losing lover are not worth answering Give your anger sway, and when you are reasonable again, tell me A man mad in love has some title to my pity"
"And, sir, if you were any other man but my father, I would say 'Confound your pity!' I a it, except as the result of your own unreasonable demands on me--Our conversation is extremely unpleasant, and I desire to put an end to it Permit me to return to the house"
"With allto your mother, at present, on this subject:" then with an air of dejection he added-- "What is past, o; and whatever is to come is very sure to happen"
"Sir, nothing past, present, or future, can change me I shall obey the wishes of e, that Love is noise He follows Fortune"
"Good-, sir"
"Let it be so I will see you to-morrow in town Ten to one, you will be more reasonable then"
He stood in the centre of the roadatching his son's angry carriage The poise of his head, and his rapid, uneven steps, were symptoms the anxious father understood very well "He is in a naked teuise," he muttered; "and I hope his own company will satisfy him until the first fever is past Do I not know that to be in love is to be possessed? It is in the head--the heart--the blood--it is indeed an uncontrollable fever! I hope, first and foremost, that he will keep away from his mother in his present unreason"