Clarissa Harlowe; or the history of a young lady — Volume 3

Chapter 21

Chapter 2148 wordsPublic domain

displeased with him for his affectedly-bashful hints of matrimony. Mutual recriminations. He looks upon her as his, she says, by a strange sort of obligation, for having run away with her against her will. Yet but touches on the edges of matrimony neither. She is sick of herself.