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"
Now
you
are
angry
with
ME
,
"
said
Rosamond
.
"
It
is
too
bad
to
bear
ME
malice
.
You
ought
to
be
obliged
to
me
for
telling
you
.
"
"
So
I
am
,
"
said
Will
,
abruptly
,
speaking
with
that
kind
of
double
soul
which
belongs
to
dreamers
who
answer
questions
.
"
I
expect
to
hear
of
the
marriage
,
"
said
Rosamond
,
play
.
fully
.
"
Never
!
You
will
never
hear
of
the
marriage
!
"
With
those
words
uttered
impetuously
,
Will
rose
,
put
out
his
hand
to
Rosamond
,
still
with
the
air
of
a
somnambulist
,
and
went
away
.
When
he
was
gone
,
Rosamond
left
her
chair
and
walked
to
the
other
end
of
the
room
,
leaning
when
she
got
there
against
a
chiffonniere
,
and
looking
out
of
the
window
wearily
She
was
oppressed
by
ennui
,
and
by
that
dissatisfaction
which
in
women
’
s
minds
is
continually
turning
into
a
trivial
jealousy
,
referring
to
no
real
claims
,
springing
from
no
deeper
passion
than
the
vague
exactingness
of
egoism
,
and
yet
capable
of
impelling
action
as
well
as
speech
.
"
There
really
is
nothing
to
care
for
much
,
"
said
poor
Rosamond
inwardly
,
thinking
of
the
family
at
Quallingham
,
who
did
not
write
to
her
;
and
that
perhaps
Tertius
when
he
came
home
would
tease
her
about
expenses
.
She
had
already
secretly
disobeyed
him
by
asking
her
father
to
help
them
,
and
he
had
ended
decisively
by
saying
,
"
I
am
more
likely
to
want
help
myself
.
"
Good
phrases
are
surely
,
and
ever
were
,
very
commendable
.
—
Justice
Shallow
.
A
few
days
afterwards
—
it
was
already
the
end
of
August
—
there
was
an
occasion
which
caused
some
excitement
in
Middlemarch
:
the
public
,
if
it
chose
,
was
to
have
the
advantage
of
buying
,
under
the
distinguished
auspices
of
Mr
.
Borthrop
Trumbull
,
the
furniture
,
books
,
and
pictures
which
anybody
might
see
by
the
handbills
to
be
the
best
in
every
kind
,
belonging
to
Edwin
Larcher
,
Esq
.
This
was
not
one
of
the
sales
indicating
the
depression
of
trade
;
on
the
contrary
,
it
was
due
to
Mr
.
Larcher
’
s
great
success
in
the
carrying
business
,
which
warranted
his
purchase
of
a
mansion
near
Riverston
already
furnished
in
high
style
by
an
illustrious
Spa
physician
—
furnished
indeed
with
such
large
framefuls
of
expensive
flesh
-
painting
in
the
dining
-
room
,
that
Mrs
.
Larcher
was
nervous
until
reassured
by
finding
the
subjects
to
be
Scriptural
.
Hence
the
fine
opportunity
to
purchasers
which
was
well
pointed
out
in
the
handbills
of
Mr
.
Borthrop
Trumbull
,
whose
acquaintance
with
the
history
of
art
enabled
him
to
state
that
the
hall
furniture
,
to
be
sold
without
reserve
,
comprised
a
piece
of
carving
by
a
contemporary
of
Gibbons
.