Page:Posthumous Works of Mary Wollstonecraft Vol1.djvu/69

Rh ing why she thought so much of a stranger, obliged as she had been by his timely interference; [for she recollected, by degrees all the circumstances of their former meeting.] She found however that she could think of nothing else; or, if she thought of her daughter, it was to wish that she had a father whom her mother could respect and love. CHAP.