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"She's really a most improper person."
"Marie's her mother, after all: one can't blame _her_."
"But the family...."
"Ought to have stopped her...."
"From coming to the Hague."
"That's what I think, mevrouw."
"Yes, so do I."
"She's living on her husband's people."
"Well, the Van Lowes all got something from the father, you know."
"It wasn't much."
"No, not much."
"It's a very unhappy marriage."
"Yes; and the boy is shockingly brought up."
"They let him do as he likes."
"Just think, mevrouw: _the boy took the house for them!_"
"You don't mean it!"
"Yes, really!"
"What a state of affairs: it's all so immoral!"
"What did she come to the Hague for?"
"She was bored in Brussels. And she wants to thrust herself forward here, at Court."
"So I heard."
"Yes, that's so. Old connections, you see: the Van Naghels and so on.
She wants to go to Court."
"Oh, but the Van Naghels will take good care that she doesn't."
"At least, they will if they're wise."
"What an example for the girls, that aunt of theirs!"
"You know, De Staffelaer found her in Van der Welcke's arms."
The two old ladies whispered:
"No!"
"Yes, really!..."
"He's a low fellow, too."
"Yes, there's a woman in Brussels."
"If they had only stayed there!"
"How very select Aunt Constance is to-night," said Floortje to Dijkerhof.
"She's been sitting with Paul the whole evening," he answered.
"Of course, no one is good enough for her!"
"No. When you've been the wife of a diplomatist...."
"And afterwards Baroness van der Welcke...."
"What did they come to the Hague for, exactly?"
"Mamma thinks, because she is afraid that, when Grandmamma, who doesn't look far ahead, dies...."
"Well, what then?"
"Well, that she won't get her full rights."
"Oh, nonsense!"
"I tell you, she doesn't trust us."
"But, surely there's a will; and, in any case, the law ..."
"Yes, but she doesn't know that, by Dutch law, all the children share and share alike. And, to make sure of what she's to get, she wants to be on the spot when Grandmamma dies. They owe a heap of money."
"And does he do nothing for a living?"
"No. He used to sell wine at Brussels."
"Nice people, those relations of yours, though they are barons and diplomatists!"
"Oh, we don't look upon them as relations! Mamma said so distinctly."
"And so," said Mr. Van Raven to Van Naghel and Van Saetzema, "you think they came to live here merely ..."