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Updated: May 25, 2025
But I do feel that you'd be rather worth while if you'd stop philandering and discover your soul. "I am a bit homesick, and I haven't any home. If Dad hadn't married a second time, I believe he would still love me a bit. But his wife doesn't. And so here I am and as restless as ever seeking something always seeking. "And now, once more, don't break the heart of the new little girl.
And there he heard those philandering songs, and played those sweet games of forfeits, which put him quite beside himself, and kept him awake that night till the rooster crowed at the end of his first chicken-nap. What a new world did that party open to him!
If you deceive me, I'll not drive you back to Oileymead to-night." In this instance Captain Bellfield had no intention to deceive. He did not think it probable that he could do himself any good by philandering about the widow early in the day. She would be engaged with her dinner and with an early toilet.
Given only the one great essential, that he was not merely philandering, and then neither his escapades in the past, nor his cigars, nor even his suggestions towards a corporation, would stand in the way of a whole-hearted acceptance of a companion for life who had somehow managed to be such a pleasant companion during that visit at the Towers.
You are one of the ropes which hold him to this petty life to this philandering amongst the flower-pots. You are one of the ropes I want to cut. Why not, indeed? I think that I could do it." "Do you want a bribe?" "I want Mannering." "So do I!" "He can belong to you none the less for belonging to us politically." "Possibly! But I prefer him here. As a recluse he is adorable.
But I do feel that you'd be rather worth while if you'd stop philandering and discover your soul. "I am a bit homesick, and I haven't any home. If Dad hadn't married a second time, I believe he would still love me a bit. But his wife doesn't. And so here I am and as restless as ever seeking something always seeking. "And now, once more, don't break the heart of the new little girl.
She was a good and loving mother in spite of her strict ways, and knew that it was better for her romantic daughter to be learning all the housewifery lessons she could teach her, than to be reading novels, writing verses, or philandering about with her head full of girlish fancies, quite innocent in themselves, but not the stuff to live on.
She would not choose to live in a crowd, but would like to have a small circle of agreeable people she was very precise as to her desires: actually she wants to see eight or nine pleasant folk. Anyhow she has not the slightest intention of taking the chance. It becomes increasingly clear that she had had about enough of this epistolary philandering, and she indicated this in no uncertain manner.
You said just now that I knew what was going to happen; that I intended it to happen, wanted it to happen, and am glad it happened. There is more truth in that than you thought when you said it. For some time past Marian has been staying with me as a matter of custom and convenience only, using me as a cover for her philandering with Douglas, and paying me by keeping the house very nicely for me.
"'An' the wind blows fair, an' our helm's a-lee, so it's heave, my mariners, all O!" cried the Imp in his nautical voice. "Dear me!" ejaculated Lady Warburton, staring. "Elizabeth, be so obliging as to tell me what it all means. Why have you dragged these children from their beds to come philandering upon a horrid river at such an hour?"
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