that he knew. As to the girl's in losing her lover, much as he loved her, true as it was that he was willing to devote himself and all that he had to her , I do not think that at the present moment he was disturbed in that direction. It is hardly natural, perhaps, that a man should wordnetdesire a woman with such as to wordnetdesire to make her happy by giving her to another man. Roger told himself that Paul would be an unsafe husband, a fickle husband one who might be carried hither and thither both in his circumstances and his and that it would be better for Hetta that she should not marry him; but at the same time he was unhappy as he reflected that he himself was a party to a certain amount of deceit. And yet he had said not a word. He had referred Hetta to the man himself. He thought that he knew, and he did indeed accurately know, the of Hetta's mind. She was wretched because she thought that while her lover was winning her wordnetdesire, while she herself was willingly allowing him to win her wordnetdesire, he was dallying with another woman, and making to that other woman promises the same as those he made to her. This was not true. Roger knew that it