Page:Wuthering Heights and Agnes Grey (1st edition), Volume 3 (Agnes Grey).djvu/285

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AGNES GREY.
277

to the best of my power; but she would not be amused against her will, and could not against her taste and though I went beyond mere reminding, such gentle remonstrances as I could use were utterly ineffectual.

"Dear Miss Grey! it is the strangest thing. I suppose you can't help it, if it's not in your nature—but I wonder you can't win the confidence of that girl, and make your society at least as agreeable to her as that of Robert or Joseph!"

"They can talk the best about the things in which she is most interested," I replied.

"Well! that is a strange confession however, to come from her governess! Who is to form a young lady's tastes, I wonder, if the governess doesn't do it! I have known governesses who have so completely identified themselves with the reputation of their young ladies for elegance and propriety in mind and manners, that they would blush to speak a word against them; and to hear the slightest blame imputed to their pupils was worse than to be censured in their own persons,—and I really think it very natural for my part."

"Do you ma'am?"

"Yes: of course, the young lady's profi-