Kent in bodily presence stood listening before him, he was dealing so much more with his abstract thought of her, and his notion of real womanhood. But Marion Kent did stand there. She flushed up too, when he said, "We are going to lose our wives by it." What did he mean? Would he lose anything, if she took to this that she thought of, and went abroad into the world, and before it? Why didn't he say so, then? Why didn't he give her the choice? But what difference need it make, in any such way? Why shouldn't a girl be doing her part beforehand, as a man does? He was getting ahead in his trade, and saving money. By and by, he would think he had got enough, and then he would ask somebody to be his wife. What should the wife have been doing in the mean time--before she was sure that she should ever be a wife? Why shouldn't she look out for herself? She said so. "I don't see exactly, Mr. Sunderline." She called him "Mr. Sunderline," though she remembered very well that in the of his talk he had called her "Marion