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Updated: May 16, 2025
But she was clear enough about it at any rate, that Rose was more in love with you than ever and she didn't blame you for a thing. The thing that she seemed most anxious about was that her mother shouldn't blame you. Of course that took the wind out of my sails and I had to come back. So it's absurd for you to be talking as if she had a real reason for detesting you."
Mistrusting its leaders, and detesting the wretched lazzaroni, who "would have betrayed themselves and all the world," he yet threw himself heart and soul into the insurrection of 1820, saying, "Whatever I can do by money, means, or person, I will venture freely for their freedom."
But that instinct, almost abnormal, had been developed, cultivated to excess, by the energy of will in refinement, a trait so marked in the Anglo-Saxons of the New World when they like Europe, instead of detesting it.
Nothing is more tedious than a circle of young ladies who have got by rote a certain set of phrases and opinions all admiring in the same terms the same things, and detesting in like terms certain others with anxious solicitude each dressing, thinking, and acting, one as much like another as is possible.
She was obliged by her malady to listen, although detesting the irreverent ruthless man, who could direct expanding frames, in a serious tone, to love; love everybody, everything; violently and universally love; and so without intermission pay out the fat created by a rapid assimilation of nutriment.
I stayed still in the midst of you, as the swallow hovers and flits among the smoke of the fire, in order to watch over and save her little ones. Do not wait till disdain or authority mingles in the matter. Do not come to the sad necessity of resisting a monarch, and of detesting to the point of scandal that which you have so publicly loved; pity him, but depart.
An undefined heavy feeling of wrong there was, just perceptive enough to let her know, without gravely shaming, that one or another must be slain for peace to come; for it is the case in which the world of the Laws overloading her is pitiless to women, deaf past ear-trumpets, past intercession; detesting and reviling them for a feeble human cry, and for one apparent step of revolt piling the pelted stones on them.
And he, with that large true heart, so detesting falsehood he must either be wretched or deceived debased! No, there is no comfort there never will be. 'Except the best sort, tenderly whispered Violet. Theodora rested her head on her hands, and remained perfectly still for some moments, then looked up, and spoke in a depressed voice. 'I cannot talk any more. I feel shattered from head to foot.
He had always been most earnestly opposed to them, detesting monopolies which interfered with that free trade and navigation which should be common to all mankind.
"Is it my fault," he rejoined, "that she is dead? Was she immortal?" "Well," she replied, "I was so much distressed at the loss that I could not help detesting him whom I was told was the cause of it." "But, Madame," said my son, "you know, from the report which has been made to the King, that I was not the cause, and that the Dauphine was not poisoned."
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