ROSE, BLANCHE,
AND
VIOLET.

BY

G. H. LEWES, ESQ.

AUTHOR OF "RANTHORPE,"
"BIOGRAPHICAL HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY," ETC. ETC.

Il n'y a point de vertu proprement dite, sans victoire sur
nous-mêmes, et tout ce qui ne nous coûte rien, ne vaut rien.

DE MAISTRE.

IN THREE VOLUMES.

VOL. II.

LONDON:
SMITH, ELDER AND CO., 65, CORNHILL.
——
1848.

London:
Printed by STEWART and MURRAY,
Old Bailey.

CONTENTS.

——

BOOK II.—(Continued.)

CHAPTER

XXI.—[The Elopement Delayed]
XXII.—[How they went to London]
XXIII.—[Cecil's Jealousy]
XXIV.—[The Denouement]

BOOK III.

CHAPTER

I.—[Rose Vyner to Fanny Worsley]
II.—[The Woman with a Mission]
III.—[What was said of the Walton Sappho]
IV.—[Prophecies Fulfilled]
V.—[The Astute Mrs. Vyner]
VI.—[Faint Hearts and Fair Ladies]
VII.—[Bold Stroke for a Lover]
VIII.—[Woman's Caprice]
IX.—[Consequences]

BOOK IV.

CHAPTER

I.—[The Boarding-House]
II.—[Inmates of a Suburban Boarding-House]
III.—[Happy Labour, Happy Life]
IV.—[How Mrs. Vyner was Beneficent]
V.—[The Curse of Idleness]
VI.—[A Sketch of Frank Forrester]
VII.—[Cecil's First False Step]
VIII.—[The Poetess in London]
IX.—[Husband and Wife]

BOOK V.

CHAPTER

I.—[Love Feigned and Love Concealed]
II.—[Doubts Changed into Certainties]
III.—[Declaration]
IV.—[The Tempest Lours]
V.—[Vacillation]
VI.—[The Trial]
VII.—[Father And Child]
VIII.—[The Crisis]

ROSE, BLANCHE, AND VIOLET.