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"
I
should
never
have
thought
she
was
a
girl
to
fall
in
love
with
.
"
"
How
do
you
know
what
men
would
fall
in
love
with
?
Girls
never
know
.
"
"
At
least
,
Fred
,
let
me
advise
YOU
not
to
fall
in
love
with
her
,
for
she
says
she
would
not
marry
you
if
you
asked
her
"
"
She
might
have
waited
till
I
did
ask
her
.
"
"
I
knew
it
would
nettle
you
,
Fred
.
"
"
Not
at
all
.
She
would
not
have
said
so
if
you
had
not
provoked
her
.
"
Before
reaching
home
,
Fred
concluded
that
he
would
tell
the
whole
affair
as
simply
as
possible
to
his
father
,
who
might
perhaps
take
on
himself
the
unpleasant
business
of
speaking
to
Bulstrode
.
1st
Gent
.
How
class
your
man
?
—
as
better
than
the
most
,
Or
,
seeming
better
,
worse
beneath
that
cloak
?
As
saint
or
knave
,
pilgrim
or
hypocrite
?
2d
Gent
.
Nay
,
tell
me
how
you
class
your
wealth
of
booksThe
drifted
relics
of
all
time
.
As
well
sort
them
at
once
by
size
and
livery
:
Vellum
,
tall
copies
,
and
the
common
calfWill
hardly
cover
more
diversityThan
all
your
labels
cunningly
devisedTo
class
your
unread
authors
.
In
consequence
of
what
he
had
heard
from
Fred
,
Mr
.
Vincy
determined
to
speak
with
Mr
.
Bulstrode
in
his
private
room
at
the
Bank
at
half
-
past
one
,
when
he
was
usually
free
from
other
callers
.
But
a
visitor
had
come
in
at
one
o
’
clock
,
and
Mr
.
Bulstrode
had
so
much
to
say
to
him
,
that
there
was
little
chance
of
the
interview
being
over
in
half
an
hour
.
The
banker
’
s
speech
was
fluent
,
but
it
was
also
copious
,
and
he
used
up
an
appreciable
amount
of
time
in
brief
meditative
pauses
.
Do
not
imagine
his
sickly
aspect
to
have
been
of
the
yellow
,
black
-
haired
sort
:
he
had
a
pale
blond
skin
,
thin
gray
-
besprinkled
brown
hair
,
light
-
gray
eyes
,
and
a
large
forehead
.
Loud
men
called
his
subdued
tone
an
undertone
,
and
sometimes
implied
that
it
was
inconsistent
with
openness
;
though
there
seems
to
be
no
reason
why
a
loud
man
should
not
be
given
to
concealment
of
anything
except
his
own
voice
,
unless
it
can
be
shown
that
Holy
Writ
has
placed
the
seat
of
candor
in
the
lungs
.
Mr
.
Bulstrode
had
also
a
deferential
bending
attitude
in
listening
,
and
an
apparently
fixed
attentiveness
in
his
eyes
which
made
those
persons
who
thought
themselves
worth
hearing
infer
that
he
was
seeking
the
utmost
improvement
from
their
discourse
.
Others
,
who
expected
to
make
no
great
figure
,
disliked
this
kind
of
moral
lantern
turned
on
them
.
If
you
are
not
proud
of
your
cellar
,
there
is
no
thrill
of
satisfaction
in
seeing
your
guest
hold
up
his
wine
-
glass
to
the
light
and
look
judicial
.
Such
joys
are
reserved
for
conscious
merit
.
Hence
Mr
.
Bulstrode
’
s
close
attention
was
not
agreeable
to
the
publicans
and
sinners
in
Middlemarch
;
it
was
attributed
by
some
to
his
being
a
Pharisee
,
and
by
others
to
his
being
Evangelical
.
Less
superficial
reasoners
among
them
wished
to
know
who
his
father
and
grandfather
were
,
observing
that
five
-
and
-
twenty
years
ago
nobody
had
ever
heard
of
a
Bulstrode
in
Middlemarch
.
To
his
present
visitor
,
Lydgate
,
the
scrutinizing
look
was
a
matter
of
indifference
:
he
simply
formed
an
unfavorable
opinion
of
the
banker
’
s
constitution
,
and
concluded
that
he
had
an
eager
inward
life
with
little
enjoyment
of
tangible
things
.