"This house and this parish would not be what they are, Mr. Dodd, were it not for me."
"My love, I am fully sensible of my great good fortune."
"John," said the vicar's wife as soon as they were alone, "one of us ought to write to that poor thing."
"What poor thing, my dear?"
"I mean the squire's unhappy daughter," she said.
"Good heavens, Cecilia, for goodness sake, let her alone."
"Leave her alone in the hour of her tribulation! Mr. Dodd, is that your advice as a clergyman, or is it your other entity, the man of the world, who speaks?"
"Common prudence, my dear, suggests discretion."
"And who shall listen to the whisper of prudence, when common duty speaks so loudly, Mr. Dodd?"
"My dear, 'too many cooks spoil the broth,' is a homely saying."