Love Me Little, Love Me Long

Charles Reade
Love Me Little, Love Me Long

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Title: Love Me Little, Love Me Long
Author: Charles Reade
Edition: 10
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
Release Date: November, 2003 [Etext #4607] [Yes, we are more than
one year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on February 18,
2002]
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Love Me Little, Love Me Long
by Charles Reade

PREFACE
SHOULD these characters, imbedded in carpet incidents, interest the
public at all, they will probably reappear in more potent scenes. This
design, which I may never live to execute, is, I fear, the only excuse I
can at present offer for some pages, forming the twelfth chapter of this
volume.

CHAPTER I
.

NEARLY a quarter of a century ago, Lucy Fountain, a young lady of
beauty and distinction, was, by the death of her mother, her sole
surviving parent, left in the hands of her two trustees, Edward Fountain,
Esq., of Font Abbey, and Mr. Bazalgette, a merchant whose wife was
Mrs. Fountain's half-sister.
They agreed to lighten the burden by dividing it. She should spend half
the year with each trustee in turn, until marriage should take her off
their hands.
Our mild tale begins in Mr. Bazalgette's own house, two years after the
date of that arrangement.
The chit-chat must be your main clue to the characters. In life it is the
same. Men and women won't come to you ticketed, or explanation in
hand.
"Lucy, you are a great comfort in a house; it is so nice to have some
one to pour out one's heart to; my husband is no use at all."
"Aunt Bazalgette!"
"In that way. You listen to my faded illusions, to the aspirations of a
nature too finely organized, ah! to find its happiness in this rough,
selfish world. When I open my bosom to him, what does he do? Guess
now--whistles."
"Then I call that rude."
"So do I; and then he whistles more and more."
"Yes; but, aunt, if any serious trouble or grief fell upon you, you would
find Mr. Bazalgette a much greater comfort and a better stay than poor
spiritless me."
"Oh, if the house took fire and fell about our ears, he would come out
of his shell, no doubt; or if the children all died one after another, poor
dear little souls; but those great troubles only come in stories. Give me
a friend that can sympathize with the real hourly mortifications of a too
susceptible nature; sit on this ottoman, and let me go on. Where was I
when Jones came and interrupted us? They always do just at the
interesting
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