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And
so
she
has
brought
up
Kate
and
Ellen
.
You
may
think
how
hard
it
will
be
for
her
to
go
among
foreigners
.
"
"
The
doctor
says
that
is
what
he
should
recommend
the
Lydgates
to
do
,
"
said
Mrs
.
Sprague
.
"
He
says
Lydgate
ought
to
have
kept
among
the
French
.
"
"
That
would
suit
HER
well
enough
,
I
dare
say
,
"
said
Mrs
.
Plymdale
;
"
there
is
that
kind
of
lightness
about
her
.
But
she
got
that
from
her
mother
;
she
never
got
it
from
her
aunt
Bulstrode
,
who
always
gave
her
good
advice
,
and
to
my
knowledge
would
rather
have
had
her
marry
elsewhere
.
"
Отключить рекламу
Mrs
.
Plymdale
was
in
a
situation
which
caused
her
some
complication
of
feeling
.
There
had
been
not
only
her
intimacy
with
Mrs
.
Bulstrode
,
but
also
a
profitable
business
relation
of
the
great
Plymdale
dyeing
house
with
Mr
.
Bulstrode
,
which
on
the
one
hand
would
have
inclined
her
to
desire
that
the
mildest
view
of
his
character
should
be
the
true
one
,
but
on
the
other
,
made
her
the
more
afraid
of
seeming
to
palliate
his
culpability
.
Again
,
the
late
alliance
of
her
family
with
the
Tollers
had
brought
her
in
connection
with
the
best
circle
,
which
gratified
her
in
every
direction
except
in
the
inclination
to
those
serious
views
which
she
believed
to
be
the
best
in
another
sense
.
The
sharp
little
woman
s
conscience
was
somewhat
troubled
in
the
adjustment
of
these
opposing
"
bests
,
"
and
of
her
griefs
and
satisfactions
under
late
events
,
which
were
likely
to
humble
those
who
needed
humbling
,
but
also
to
fall
heavily
on
her
old
friend
whose
faults
she
would
have
preferred
seeing
on
a
background
of
prosperity
.
Poor
Mrs
.
Bulstrode
,
meanwhile
,
had
been
no
further
shaken
by
the
oncoming
tread
of
calamity
than
in
the
busier
stirring
of
that
secret
uneasiness
which
had
always
been
present
in
her
since
the
last
visit
of
Raffles
to
The
Shrubs
.
That
the
hateful
man
had
come
ill
to
Stone
Court
,
and
that
her
husband
had
chosen
to
remain
there
and
watch
over
him
,
she
allowed
to
be
explained
by
the
fact
that
Raffles
had
been
employed
and
aided
in
earlier
-
days
,
and
that
this
made
a
tie
of
benevolence
towards
him
in
his
degraded
helplessness
;
and
she
had
been
since
then
innocently
cheered
by
her
husband
s
more
hopeful
speech
about
his
own
health
and
ability
to
continue
his
attention
to
business
.
The
calm
was
disturbed
when
Lydgate
had
brought
him
home
ill
from
the
meeting
,
and
in
spite
of
comforting
assurances
during
the
next
few
days
,
she
cried
in
private
from
the
conviction
that
her
husband
was
not
suffering
from
bodily
illness
merely
,
but
from
something
that
afflicted
his
mind
.
He
would
not
allow
her
to
read
to
him
,
and
scarcely
to
sit
with
him
,
alleging
nervous
susceptibility
to
sounds
and
movements
;
yet
she
suspected
that
in
shutting
himself
up
in
his
private
room
he
wanted
to
be
busy
with
his
papers
.
Something
,
she
felt
sure
,
had
happened
.
Perhaps
it
was
some
great
loss
of
money
;
and
she
was
kept
in
the
dark
.
Not
daring
to
question
her
husband
,
she
said
to
Lydgate
,
on
the
fifth
day
after
the
meeting
,
when
she
had
not
left
home
except
to
go
to
church
Отключить рекламу
"
Mr
.
Lydgate
,
pray
be
open
with
me
:
I
like
to
know
the
truth
.
Has
anything
happened
to
Mr
.
Bulstrode
?
"
"
Some
little
nervous
shock
,
"
said
Lydgate
,
evasively
.
He
felt
that
it
was
not
for
him
to
make
the
painful
revelation
.
"
But
what
brought
it
on
?
"
said
Mrs
.
Bulstrode
,
looking
directly
at
him
with
her
large
dark
eyes
.