Page:Fortunes and misfortunes of the famous Moll Flanders.pdf/4

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then in this country, and if he was to

  own his marriage with me he would
  be diſinherited, and we would be both 
  undone; but he promiſed to give me
  his beſt advice how I ſhould behave
  in the matter; ſo we parted for that
  time. The next opportunity I preſſed
  him hard what I ſhould do in this my
  unhappy ſituation. After a little ſilence
  he plainly told me, that the only way
  he could think of to ſerve us both, was
  to comply with his brother's propoſal,
  which, he had no ſooner mentioned,
  than I was fit to have ſunk down thro,
  the chair I ſat on with horror and ſur-
  priſe, and fainted away. After I had
  recovered myſelf a little, he continued
  to ſoothe me with many flattering
  words, and at the ſame time, inſiſting
  as before, of the uavoidable ruin it
  would be to us both, if I did not com-
  ply; and at the ſame time, told me,
  that conſidering his brother's paſſion
  for me, he made no doubt of procur-
  ing his mother's conſent to the mar-
  riage; but I bitterly reproached him,
  how he thought I could be his whore,
  and a wife to his brother. But to be
  ſhort, he manag'd matters ſo well that