W HY , Cousin Raymond, how can you suppose? Why, she's only sixteen!'
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She told me she was seventeen, said the young man, as if it made a great difference.
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Well, only just! Mrs. Temperly replied, in the tone of graceful, reasonable concession.
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Well, that's a very good age for me. I'm very young.
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You are old enough to know better, the lady remarked, in her soft, pleasant voice, which always drew the sting from a reproach, and enabled you to swallow it as you would a cooked plum, without the stone. Why, she hasn't finished her education!
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That's just what I mean, said her interlocutor. It would finish it beautifully for her to marry me.
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Have you finished yours, my dear? Mrs. Temperly inquired. The way you young people talk about marrying! she exclaimed, looking at the itinerant functionary with the long wand who touched into a flame the tall gas-lamp on the other side of the Fifth Avenue. The pair were standing, in the recess of a window, in one of the big public rooms of an immense hotel, and the October day was turning to dusk.
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Well, would you have us leave it to the old? Raymond asked. That's just what I thinkshe would be such a help to me, he continued. I want to go back to Paris to study more. I have come home too soon. I don't know half enough; they know more here than I thought. So it would be perfectly easy, and we should all be together.
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Well, my dear, when you do come back to Paris we will talk about it, said Mrs. Temperly, turning away from the window.
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I should like it better, Cousin Maria, if you trusted me a little more, Raymond sighed, observing that she was not really giving her thoughts to what he said. She irritated him somehow; she was so full of her impending departure, of her arrangements, her last duties and memoranda. She was not exactly important, any more than she was humble; she was
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