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| | Victorian Women Writers Project |
 | | Daphne treated her in many ways with great generosity, paid her highly, grudged her no luxury, and was always courteous to her in public. |
 | | Daphne's charities were for Daphne an amusement; for this gentle, faded woman, who bore all the drudgery of them, they were the chief attraction of life in Daphne's house. |
 | | Daphne, according to her, should be promptly married and her millions taken care of, and the handsome, broad-shouldered fellow impressed the little Frenchwomnan's imagination as a proper and capable watchdog. |
| www.indiana.edu /~letrs/vwwp/ward/daphne.html (17229 words) |
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