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"
She
wants
to
go
to
Lowick
,
to
look
over
papers
,
"
said
Celia
.
"
She
ought
not
,
ought
she
?
"
Lydgate
did
not
speak
for
a
few
moments
.
Then
he
said
,
looking
at
Dorothea
.
"
I
hardly
know
.
In
my
opinion
Mrs
.
Casaubon
should
do
what
would
give
her
the
most
repose
of
mind
.
That
repose
will
not
always
come
from
being
forbidden
to
act
.
"
"
Thank
you
;
"
said
Dorothea
,
exerting
herself
,
"
I
am
sure
that
is
wise
.
There
are
so
many
things
which
I
ought
to
attend
to
.
Why
should
I
sit
here
idle
?
"
Then
,
with
an
effort
to
recall
subjects
not
connected
with
her
agitation
,
she
added
,
abruptly
,
"
You
know
every
one
in
Middlemarch
,
I
think
,
Mr
.
Lydgate
.
I
shall
ask
you
to
tell
me
a
great
deal
.
I
have
serious
things
to
do
now
.
I
have
a
living
to
give
away
.
You
know
Mr
.
Tyke
and
all
the
"
But
Dorothea
s
effort
was
too
much
for
her
;
she
broke
off
and
burst
into
sobs
.
Lydgate
made
her
drink
a
dose
of
sal
volatile
.
Отключить рекламу
"
Let
Mrs
.
Casaubon
do
as
she
likes
,
"
he
said
to
Sir
James
,
whom
he
asked
to
see
before
quitting
the
house
.
"
She
wants
perfect
freedom
,
I
think
,
more
than
any
other
prescription
.
"
His
attendance
on
Dorothea
while
her
brain
was
excited
,
had
enabled
him
to
form
some
true
conclusions
concerning
the
trials
of
her
life
.
He
felt
sure
that
she
had
been
suffering
from
the
strain
and
conflict
of
self
-
repression
;
and
that
she
was
likely
now
to
feel
herself
only
in
another
sort
of
pinfold
than
that
from
which
she
had
been
released
.
Lydgate
s
advice
was
all
the
easier
for
Sir
James
to
follow
when
he
found
that
Celia
had
already
told
Dorothea
the
unpleasant
fact
about
the
will
.
There
was
no
help
for
it
now
no
reason
for
any
further
delay
in
the
execution
of
necessary
business
.
And
the
next
day
Sir
James
complied
at
once
with
her
request
that
he
would
drive
her
to
Lowick
.
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"
I
have
no
wish
to
stay
there
at
present
,
"
said
Dorothea
;
"
I
could
hardly
bear
it
.
I
am
much
happier
at
Freshitt
with
Celia
.
I
shall
be
able
to
think
better
about
what
should
be
done
at
Lowick
by
looking
at
it
from
a
distance
.
And
I
should
like
to
be
at
the
Grange
a
little
while
with
my
uncle
,
and
go
about
in
all
the
old
walks
and
among
the
people
in
the
village
.
"
"
Not
yet
,
I
think
.
Your
uncle
is
having
political
company
,
and
you
are
better
out
of
the
way
of
such
doings
,
"
said
Sir
James
,
who
at
that
moment
thought
of
the
Grange
chiefly
as
a
haunt
of
young
Ladislaw
s
.
But
no
word
passed
between
him
and
Dorothea
about
the
objectionable
part
of
the
will
;
indeed
,
both
of
them
felt
that
the
mention
of
it
between
them
would
be
impossible
.
Sir
James
was
shy
,
even
with
men
,
about
disagreeable
subjects
;
and
the
one
thing
that
Dorothea
would
have
chosen
to
say
,
if
she
had
spoken
on
the
matter
at
all
,
was
forbidden
to
her
at
present
because
it
seemed
to
be
a
further
exposure
of
her
husband
s
injustice
.
Yet
she
did
wish
that
Sir
James
could
know
what
had
passed
between
her
and
her
husband
about
Will
Ladislaw
s
moral
claim
on
the
property
:
it
would
then
,
she
thought
,
be
apparent
to
him
as
it
was
to
her
,
that
her
husband
s
strange
indelicate
proviso
had
been
chiefly
urged
by
his
bitter
resistance
to
that
idea
of
claim
,
and
not
merely
by
personal
feelings
more
difficult
to
talk
about
.
Also
,
it
must
be
admitted
,
Dorothea
wished
that
this
could
be
known
for
Will
s
sake
,
since
her
friends
seemed
to
think
of
him
as
simply
an
object
of
Mr
.
Casaubon
s
charity
.
Why
should
he
be
compared
with
an
Italian
carrying
white
mice
?
That
word
quoted
from
Mrs
.
Cadwallader
seemed
like
a
mocking
travesty
wrought
in
the
dark
by
an
impish
finger
.