St Oggs Passes Judgment
It St Oggs t Miss tulliver o be married to Mr Step - at all events, Mr Step married o ty o results; knos are arrived at. If Miss tulliver, after a feravel, urned as Mrs Step - -marital trousseau and all tages possessed even by t un Oggs, as elseo trict sistency s. Public opinion, in t t t te t family in St Oggs - ion, o a course, of it, ment, especially to t s young tep ainly not be to tuated attacs - and bad as it migep to admit test advances from sually eo young akem - old akem io) still s so very fasating, and, tively t last!) and quite against could s e baaize-coloured satie bees seems as if t e e in - several of oo o buy for iable - but tive e - and t t felt no more for , it ter for to marry a ulliver - quite romantic! up for t t ele. Not young akem nearly out of o be out of te t t declares s Mr and Mrs Step - suding to be better ty couldnt be carried on if o private du t y tells us to t Miss Unit ts, of a kind to tenuation of t. Maggie urned a trousseau, a degraded and outcast dition to fine instinct y, sa o Miss tullivers duct aggravated kind. Could aable? - A girl so muced to o lay tions ao ions? t tulliver: it o say t suated by mere unionable about e ing, in fact! But disposition! - to tullivers very p a refined instinct felt to be propic of ep, iable ty is not to be too severely judged in t t e of ed so soon looked very bladeed - for o be sure ten a letter, laying all telling tory in a romantic faso try and make e i: of course ! But tinct of t to be deceived: providentially! - else y? urned be sure, before . A truly respectable young man - Mr tom tulliver - quite likely to rise in ters disgrace urally a o o be s of to America, or any Oggs from taint of remely dangerous to daugo o be , and t God y on he worlds wife had.
It required nearly a finct to assure itself of tions; i er came, telling s and adding t: o at Mudport for money - ion at present.
Maggie, all too entirely filled y, to spend any t on t aken of by t Oggs: ay about Step on in a orm of mingled love, remorse, and pity. If s of reje and injustice at all, it - t sroke from tolerable siy for t again and again, like a o a s. t; it seemed as if every sensitive fibre in oo entirely preoccupied by paio vibrate again to ac of penitence, and all s o, o guarantee ed ies t made no peace ceivable except suche sense of a sure refuge.
But s practical iions: to an inand a for to remember t s get s looked vague, s of returning to ting enougo pay for Bobs. S to persuade o return to tom again; and someain St Oggs. Dr Kenn tary feeling of relia alkiion for tunity of fiding everyto Mr Deao learn roused y o ed to er. But at last, so go and see sister Glegg, om at tullivers abse he occasion.
As soon as on . So tory and asking to see Dr Kenn: t jar upon us in suces. It time sur on t tness of meeting people on tared at, did not occur to sreets at o look t. Presently, urnbull, old acquaintances ely and turned a little aside speaking. All o Maggie, but o for rese: no speak to me, s - t noo pass a group of gentlemen, t orry step out a little o air of nonc ooo intense for to feel t sting even in t of time t took strong s on o be due to o s tory noributioribution may e from any voice - t, cruelest, most imbruted urc treet-er inflict it: surely y are rarer teous to bestow.
S once, after being announced, into Dr Kenns study, piled-up books, for ite, leaning t c a and whe door was closed, Dr Kenn said, plag a chair fgie,
`I o see you, Miss tulliver - you icipated me - I am glad you did.
Maggie looked at ness as s t to tell you everyt ears as s, and all t-up excitement of ing before she could say more.
`Do tell me everyt kindness in o wed, wo help you.
In ratences - , at first, but soon er ease t came from a sense of relief in told tory of a struggle t must be ted ents of Stepter, and oion of Maggies statement. t involuntary plaint of go, s.
Maggie d t on to o all t. for some miy on last, ed Maggie,
`Your prompting to go to your friends - to remain ing, to itution and discipline responds - opening its arms to tent - cs co t - never abandoning til te. And t to represent ty, so t every paris togetian brotual fat tian fraternity are entirely relaxed - to exist in t in tial, tradictory form taken in ties of scics; and if I supported by t t ultimately recover t stitution o en lose at t of felloy among my o present everytending toion of ties - toitution of ion s in t. Your sd your rue lig, Miss tulliver; and I you may knoo you - erag circumstances.
Dr Kenn paused a little y of kno ion to its reserve, s ened. As it antly, quite sure t tive on.
`Your inexperience of tulliver, prevents you from anticipating fully, t ceptions t - ceptions e of knoo disprove them.
`O, I do - I begin to see, said Maggie, uo repress tterance of pain. `I knohan I am.
`You per yet knooucy, `t a letter is e o satisfy every one paturn to t at t urn of all difficult.
`Oremor, t no presence could have hindered.
`ten of all t passed to ed you to tmost; and I ion of t letter to your cousin will on her.
Dr Kenn ed fet calm again before on.
`t letter, as I said, ougo suffice you to prevent false impressions ing you. But I am bound to tell you, Miss tulliver, t not only t my observation t t of false imputations. t incapable of a stious struggle suco s judgment; because t believe in your struggle. I fear your life tended not only rus. For to sider perter for you to take a situation at a distance, acc to your former iion. I myself at oo obtain one for you.
`O, if I could but stop to begin a strange life again. I say. I s off from t. I ten to tuation to excuse myself. If I remained one in some o Lucy - to ot Im sorry. And, s, `I go ao retract t go a last, because - because ot, I go now.
`ell, said Dr Kenn, after some sideration, `if you determine on t, Miss tulliver, you may rely on all tion gives me. I am bound to aid and tenance you, by ties of my office as a paris. I personally I erest in your peaind and welfare.
`t is some occupation t o get my bread and be indepe, said Maggie. `I s much. I go on lodging where I am.
`I must t maturely, said Dr Kenn, `And in a feer able to ascertain to see you: I santly in mind.
ood ruminating , under a painful sense of doubt and difficulty. tone of Stepter, ions of all timate marriage betep evil; and ty of ty in St Oggs on any otion, until after years of separation, table prospective difficulty gies stay ered ual flid lived ted service to o t state of Maggies and sce o tion to not be tampered ed old intervention oo dubious a responsibility to be ligo restore tions o tion of a neep h evil.
t problem of tiioy is clear to no man ion, ion t accept t respass, is one for all cases. ts ted spirit of minute discrimination ruto oo often fatally sealed: trut moral judgments must remain false and ened by a perpetual refereo ta mark t.
All people of broad, strong sense inctive repugo t terious plexity of our life is not to be embraced by maxims, and t to lace ourselves up in formulas of t sort is to repress all tings and inspirations t spring from groive of t are guided in t solely by general rules, t to justice by a ready-made paterouble of exerting patience, discrimination, impartiality, any care to assure t t es from a imate of temptation, or from a life vivid and intense enougo ed a is human.
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