Two Strangers
by Mrs. Oliphant
2021-01-14 02:58:02
"And who is this young widow of yours whom I hear so much about? I understand Lucy''s rapture over any stranger; but you, too, mother-""I too-well, there is no particular witchcraft about it; a nice young woman has as much chance with me as with any ...
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"And who is this young widow of yours whom I hear so much about? I understand Lucy''s rapture over any stranger; but you, too, mother-""I too-well, there is no particular witchcraft about it; a nice young woman has as much chance with me as with any one, Ralph-""Oh, if it''s only a nice young woman-""It''s a great deal more," said Lucy. "Why, Miss Jones at the school is a nice young woman-don''t you be taken in by mother''s old-fashioned stilts. She is a darling-she is as nice as nice can be. She''s pretty, and she''s good, and she''s clever. She has read a lot, and seen a lot, and been everywhere, and knows heaps and heaps of people, and yet just as simple and as nice as if she had never been married, never had a baby, and was just a girl like the rest of us-Mother! there is nothing wrong in what I said?" Lucy suddenly cried, stopping short and blushing all over with the innocent alarm of a youthfulness which had not been trained to modern modes of speech."Nothing wrong, certainly," said the mother, with a half smile; "but-there is no need for entering into all these details."
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