As a scandalized Victorian society looks on, Alice Vavasor, Lady Glencora, and the Widow Greenow continue their romantic entanglements with disreputable suitors.
In the meantime Kate Vavasor was living down in Westmoreland, with no other society than that of her grandfather, and did not altogether have a very pleasant life of it. George had been apt to represent the old man to himself as being as strong as an old tower, which, though it be but a ruin, shows no sign of falling. To his eyes the squire had always seemed to be full of life and power. He could be violent on occasions, and was hardly ever without violence in his eyes and voice. But George sopinion was formed by his wish, or rather by the reverses of his wish. For years he had been longing that his grandfather should die, had been accusing Fate of gross injustice in that she did not snap the thread; and with such thoughts in his mind he had grudged every ounce which the squires vigour had been able to sustain. He had almost taught himself to believe that it would be a good deed to squeeze what remained of hfe out of that vioent old throat.
(Typographical errors above are due to OCR software and don't occur in the book.)
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