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"
Yes
,
it
is
,
"
said
Will
,
starting
up
again
with
his
hat
in
his
hand
.
"
It
is
eminently
mine
to
ask
such
questions
,
when
I
have
to
decide
whether
I
will
have
transactions
with
you
and
accept
your
money
.
My
unblemished
honor
is
important
to
me
.
It
is
important
to
me
to
have
no
stain
on
my
birth
and
connections
.
And
now
I
find
there
is
a
stain
which
I
can
t
help
.
My
mother
felt
it
,
and
tried
to
keep
as
clear
of
it
as
she
could
,
and
so
will
I
.
You
shall
keep
your
ill
-
gotten
money
.
If
I
had
any
fortune
of
my
own
,
I
would
willingly
pay
it
to
any
one
who
could
disprove
what
you
have
told
me
.
What
I
have
to
thank
you
for
is
that
you
kept
the
money
till
now
,
when
I
can
refuse
it
.
It
ought
to
lie
with
a
man
s
self
that
he
is
a
gentleman
.
Good
-
night
,
sir
.
"
Bulstrode
was
going
to
speak
,
but
Will
,
with
determined
quickness
,
was
out
of
the
room
in
an
instant
,
and
in
another
the
hall
-
door
had
closed
behind
him
.
He
was
too
strongly
possessed
with
passionate
rebellion
against
this
inherited
blot
which
had
been
thrust
on
his
knowledge
to
reflect
at
present
whether
he
had
not
been
too
hard
on
Bulstrode
too
arrogantly
merciless
towards
a
man
of
sixty
,
who
was
making
efforts
at
retrieval
when
time
had
rendered
them
vain
.
Отключить рекламу
No
third
person
listening
could
have
thoroughly
understood
the
impetuosity
of
Will
s
repulse
or
the
bitterness
of
his
words
.
No
one
but
himself
then
knew
how
everything
connected
with
the
sentiment
of
his
own
dignity
had
an
immediate
bearing
for
him
on
his
relation
to
Dorothea
and
to
Mr
.
Casaubon
s
treatment
of
him
.
And
in
the
rush
of
impulses
by
which
he
flung
back
that
offer
of
Bulstrode
s
there
was
mingled
the
sense
that
it
would
have
been
impossible
for
him
ever
to
tell
Dorothea
that
he
had
accepted
it
.
As
for
Bulstrode
when
Will
was
gone
he
suffered
a
violent
reaction
,
and
wept
like
a
woman
It
was
the
first
time
he
had
encountered
an
open
expression
of
scorn
from
any
man
higher
than
Raffles
;
and
with
that
scorn
hurrying
like
venom
through
his
system
,
there
was
no
sensibility
left
to
consolations
.
Rut
the
relief
of
weeping
had
to
be
checked
.
His
wife
and
daughters
soon
came
home
from
hearing
the
address
of
an
Oriental
missionary
,
and
were
full
of
regret
that
papa
had
not
heard
,
in
the
first
instance
,
the
interesting
things
which
they
tried
to
repeat
to
him
.
Perhaps
,
through
all
other
hidden
thoughts
,
the
one
that
breathed
most
comfort
was
,
that
Will
Ladislaw
at
least
was
not
likely
to
publish
what
had
taken
place
that
evening
.
Отключить рекламу
"
He
was
a
squyer
of
lowe
degre
,
That
loved
the
king
s
daughter
of
Hungrie
.
Old
Romance
.
Will
Ladislaw
s
mind
was
now
wholly
bent
on
seeing
Dorothea
again
,
and
forthwith
quitting
Middlemarch
.
The
morning
after
his
agitating
scene
with
Bulstrode
he
wrote
a
brief
letter
to
her
,
saying
that
various
causes
had
detained
him
in
the
neighborhood
longer
than
he
had
expected
,
and
asking
her
permission
to
call
again
at
Lowick
at
some
hour
which
she
would
mention
on
the
earliest
possible
day
,
he
being
anxious
to
depart
,
but
unwilling
to
do
so
until
she
had
granted
him
an
interview
.
He
left
the
letter
at
the
office
,
ordering
the
messenger
to
carry
it
to
Lowick
Manor
,
and
wait
for
an
answer
.
Ladislaw
felt
the
awkwardness
of
asking
for
more
last
words
.
His
former
farewell
had
been
made
in
the
hearing
of
Sir
James
Chettam
,
and
had
been
announced
as
final
even
to
the
butler
.
It
is
certainly
trying
to
a
man
s
dignity
to
reappear
when
he
is
not
expected
to
do
so
:
a
first
farewell
has
pathos
in
it
,
but
to
come
back
for
a
second
lends
an
opening
to
comedy
,
and
it
was
possible
even
that
there
might
be
bitter
sneers
afloat
about
Will
s
motives
for
lingering
.
Still
it
was
on
the
whole
more
satisfactory
to
his
feeling
to
take
the
directest
means
of
seeing
Dorothea
,
than
to
use
any
device
which
might
give
an
air
of
chance
to
a
meeting
of
which
he
wished
her
to
understand
that
it
was
what
he
earnestly
sought
.