The American Claimant


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"I don't know that I quite understand. Do you mean to say that if he was  
all right and proper otherwise you'd be indifferent about the earl part  
of the business?"  
"Absolutely."  
"You'd be entirely satisfied with him and wouldn't care for his not being  
an earl's son,--that being an earl's son wouldn't add any value to him?"  
"
Not the least value that I would care for. Why, Mr. Hawkins, I've  
gotten over all that day-dreaming about earldoms and aristocracies and  
all such nonsense and am become just a plain ordinary nobody and content  
with it; and it is to him I owe my cure. And as to anything being able  
to add a value to him, nothing can do that. He is the whole world to me,  
just as he is; he comprehends all the values there are--then how can you  
add one?"  
"She's pretty far gone." He said that to himself. He continued, still  
to himself, "I must change my plan again; I can't seem to strike one that  
will stand the requirements of this most variegated emergency five  
minutes on a stretch. Without making this fellow a criminal, I believe  
I will invent a name and a character for him calculated to disenchant  
her. If it fails to do it, then I'll know that the next rightest thing  
to do will be to help her to her fate, poor thing, not hinder her."  
Then he said aloud:  
276  


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