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Stronger
than
all
,
there
was
the
regard
for
a
friend
’
s
moral
improvement
,
sometimes
called
her
soul
,
which
was
likely
to
be
benefited
by
remarks
tending
to
gloom
,
uttered
with
the
accompaniment
of
pensive
staring
at
the
furniture
and
a
manner
implying
that
the
speaker
would
not
tell
what
was
on
her
mind
,
from
regard
to
the
feelings
of
her
hearer
.
On
the
whole
,
one
might
say
that
an
ardent
charity
was
at
work
setting
the
virtuous
mind
to
make
a
neighbor
unhappy
for
her
good
.
There
were
hardly
any
wives
in
Middlemarch
whose
matrimonial
misfortunes
would
in
different
ways
be
likely
to
call
forth
more
of
this
moral
activity
than
Rosamond
and
her
aunt
Bulstrode
.
Mrs
.
Bulstrode
was
not
an
object
of
dislike
,
and
had
never
consciously
injured
any
human
being
.
Men
had
always
thought
her
a
handsome
comfortable
woman
,
and
had
reckoned
it
among
the
signs
of
Bulstrode
’
s
hypocrisy
that
he
had
chosen
a
red
-
blooded
Vincy
,
instead
of
a
ghastly
and
melancholy
person
suited
to
his
low
esteem
for
earthly
pleasure
.
When
the
scandal
about
her
husband
was
disclosed
they
remarked
of
her
—
"
Ah
,
poor
woman
!
She
’
s
as
honest
as
the
day
—
SHE
never
suspected
anything
wrong
in
him
,
you
may
depend
on
it
.
"
Women
,
who
were
intimate
with
her
,
talked
together
much
of
"
poor
Harriet
,
"
imagined
what
her
feelings
must
be
when
she
came
to
know
everything
,
and
conjectured
how
much
she
had
already
come
to
know
.
There
was
no
spiteful
disposition
towards
her
;
rather
,
there
was
a
busy
benevolence
anxious
to
ascertain
what
it
would
be
well
for
her
to
feel
and
do
under
the
circumstances
,
which
of
course
kept
the
imagination
occupied
with
her
character
and
history
from
the
times
when
she
was
Harriet
Vincy
till
now
.
With
the
review
of
Mrs
.
Bulstrode
and
her
position
it
was
inevitable
to
associate
Rosamond
,
whose
prospects
were
under
the
same
blight
with
her
aunt
’
s
.
Rosamond
was
more
severely
criticised
and
less
pitied
,
though
she
too
,
as
one
of
the
good
old
Vincy
family
who
had
always
been
known
in
Middlemarch
,
was
regarded
as
a
victim
to
marriage
with
an
interloper
.
The
Vincys
had
their
weaknesses
,
but
then
they
lay
on
the
surface
:
there
was
never
anything
bad
to
be
"
found
out
"
concerning
them
.
Mrs
.
Bulstrode
was
vindicated
from
any
resemblance
to
her
husband
.
Harriet
’
s
faults
were
her
own
.
"
She
has
always
been
showy
,
"
said
Mrs
.
Hackbutt
,
making
tea
for
a
small
party
,
"
though
she
has
got
into
the
way
of
putting
her
religion
forward
,
to
conform
to
her
husband
;
she
has
tried
to
hold
her
head
up
above
Middlemarch
by
making
it
known
that
she
invites
clergymen
and
heaven
-
knows
-
who
from
Riverston
and
those
places
.
"
"
We
can
hardly
blame
her
for
that
,
"
said
Mrs
.
Sprague
;
"
because
few
of
the
best
people
in
the
town
cared
to
associate
with
Balstrode
,
and
she
must
have
somebody
to
sit
down
at
her
table
.
"
"
Mr
.
Thesiger
has
always
countenanced
him
,
"
said
Mrs
.
Hackbutt
.
"
I
think
he
must
be
sorry
now
.
"
"
But
he
was
never
fond
of
him
in
his
heart
—
that
every
one
knows
,
"
said
Mrs
.
Tom
Toller
.
"
Mr
.
Thesiger
never
goes
into
extremes
.
He
keeps
to
the
truth
in
what
is
evangelical
.
It
is
only
clergymen
like
Mr
.
Tyke
,
who
want
to
use
Dissenting
hymn
-
books
and
that
low
kind
of
religion
,
who
ever
found
Bulstrode
to
their
taste
.
"
"
I
understand
,
Mr
.
Tyke
is
in
great
distress
about
him
,
"
said
Mrs
.
Hackbutt
.
"
And
well
he
may
be
:
they
say
the
Bulstrodes
have
half
kept
the
Tyke
family
.
"
"
And
of
coarse
it
is
a
discredit
to
his
doctrines
,
"
said
Mrs
.
Sprague
,
who
was
elderly
,
and
old
-
fashioned
in
her
opinions
.