Page:The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (emended first edition), Volume 3.djvu/99

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OF WILDFELL HALL.
89

can't imagine what a jovial good-fellow he is when he's not fairly drunk, only just primed or half-seas-over—we all have a bit of a liking for him at the bottom of our hearts, though we can't respect him."

"But should you wish yourself to be like him?"

"No, I'd rather be like myself, bad as I am."

"You can't continue as bad as you are without getting worse—and more brutalized every day—and therefore more like him."

I could not help smiling at the comical, half angry, half confounded look he put on at this rather unusual mode of address.

"Never mind my plain speaking," said I; "it is from the best of motives. But tell me, should you wish your sons to be like Mr. Huntingdon—or even like yourself?"

"Hang it, no."

"Should you wish your daughter to despise you—or, at least, to feel no vestige of respect for you, and no affection but what is mingled with the bitterest regret?"