"
"You are a wicked man; I will never marry you."
"I am very sorry, Esther. But I am not as bad as you think for. You let
your temper get the better of you. So soon as I have got a bit of money
together--"
"If you were a good man you would ask me to marry you now."
"I will if you like, but the truth is that I have only three pounds in the
world. I have been unlucky lately--"
"You think of nothing but that wicked betting. Come, let me pass; I'm not
going to listen to a lot of lies."
"After the Leger--"
"Let me pass. I will not speak to you."
"But look here, Esther: marriage or no marriage, we can't go on in this
way: they'll be suspecting something shortly."
"I shall leave Woodview." She had hardly spoken the words when it seemed
clear to her that she must leave, and the sooner the better. "Come, let me
pass.... If Mrs. Barfield--"
An angry look passed over William's face, and he said--
"I want to act honest with you, and you won't let me. If ever there was a
sulky pig! ...Sarah's quite right; you are just the sort that would make
hell of a man's life."
She was bound to make him respect her. She had vaguely felt from the
beginning that this was her only hope, and now the sensation developed and
defined itself into a thought and she decided that she would not yield,
but would continue to affirm her belief that he must acknowledge his sin,
and then come and ask her to marry him.
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