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'It's no good abusing raet out,--unless you want the carriage to take you anywhere else' Then Lady Monogra a candle went direct to her own rooestaffe followed slowly to her own cha half undressed herself, dismissed her maid and prepared to write to her ert had twice proposed that he should, in the usual way, go to Mr Longestaffe, who had been backwards and forwards in London, and was there at the present ert should see her father,--but, as she had told him, she preferred that he should postpone his visit for a day or two She was now agonized by many doubts Those feords about 'various sets' and the 's' had stabbed her to the very heart,--as had been intended Mr Brehgert was rich That was a certainty But she already repented of what she had done If it were necessary that she should really go down into another and a erts, Melmottes, and Cohenlupes, would it avail her eous house? She had known, and understood, and had revelled in the exclusiveness of county position Caversham had been dull, and there had always been there a dearth of young men of the proper sort; but it had been a place to talk of, and to feel satisfied with as a hoed before the world Her mother was dull, and her father poht set,--erts and Melested to her that she should go to the house in Grosvenor Square She would write one letter to-night; but there was a question in her mind whether the letter should be written to her ing that the match should be broken off I think she would have decided on the latter had it not been that so rams knew it, and had of course talked far and wide The Melmottes knew it, and she are that Lord Nidderdale had heard it It was already so far known that it was sure to be public before the end of the season Eachlately she had feared that a letter frohtful ru Caversham, or that her father would come to her and with horror on his face deiven her sanction to so abominable a report