1 Take heart afresh, dear husband of Madam Mina.
2 I must write no more; I must keep it to say to Jonathan, my husband.
3 You will have happy life and good life, and your husband will be blessed in you.
4 The other hand was locked in that of her husband, who held his other arm thrown round her protectingly.
5 Your husband is noble nature, and you are noble too, for you trust, and trust cannot be where there is mean nature.
6 Her husband flung himself on his knees beside her, and putting his arms round her, hid his face in the folds of her dress.
7 When the Professor had done speaking my husband looked in my eyes, and I in his; there was no need for speaking between us.
8 I suppose I was hysterical, for I threw myself on my knees and held up my hands to him, and implored him to make my husband well again.
9 I am glad, glad, that I may here be of some use to you; for if your husband suffer, he suffer within the range of my study and experience.
10 Well, I got my husband back all right; when we arrived at Exeter there was a carriage waiting for us, and in it, though he had an attack of gout, Mr. Hawkins.
11 I have read your letters to poor Lucy, and know how good you are and how your husband suffer; so I pray you, if it may be, enlighten him not, lest it may harm.
12 I must only try in the future to show that I am not ungrateful to God for all His goodness to me in sending to me such a lover, such a husband, and such a friend.
13 The poor, dear lady shivered, and I could see the tension of her nerves as she clasped her husband closer to her and bent her head lower and lower still on his breast.
14 So I told them, as well as I could, that I had read all the papers and diaries, and that my husband and I, having typewritten them, had just finished putting them in order.
15 I understood him to mean if we were to take advantage of their coming to divert if possible the thoughts of the unhappy husband and wife from each other and from themselves; so on nodding acquiescence to him he asked them what they had seen or done.
16 True to our promise, we told Mrs. Harker everything which had passed; and although she grew snowy white at times when danger had seemed to threaten her husband, and red at others when his devotion to her was manifested, she listened bravely and with calmness.
17 Then I kissed it and showed it to my husband, and told him that I would keep it so, and then it would be an outward and visible sign for us all our lives that we trusted each other; that I would never open it unless it were for his own dear sake or for the sake of some stern duty.
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