Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 10,116 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith.

Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 10,116 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith.

“He laughs at the whole lot of ye.”

“Who?” she asked, with betraying cheeks.

“This Mr. Robert Armstrong of yours.”

“Of mine, uncle!”

“He don’t seem to care a snap o’ the finger for any of ye.”

“Then, none of us must care for him, uncle.”

“Now, just the contrary.  That always shows a young fellow who’s attending to his business.  If he’d seen you boil potatoes, make dumplings, beds, tea, all that, you’d have had a chance.  He’d have marched up to ye before you was off to London.”

“Saying, ‘You are the woman.’” Rhoda was too desperately tickled by the idea to refrain from uttering it, though she was angry, and suffering internal discontent.  “Or else, ‘You are the cook,’” she muttered, and shut, with the word, steel bars across her heart, calling him, mentally, names not justified by anything he had said or done—­such as mercenary, tyrannical, and such like.

Robert was attentive to her in church.  Once she caught him with his eyes on her face; but he betrayed no confusion, and looked away at the clergyman.  When the text was given out, he found the place in his Bible, and handed it to her pointedly—­“There shall be snares and traps unto you;” a line from Joshua.  She received the act as a polite pawing civility; but when she was coming out of church, Robert saw that a blush swept over her face, and wondered what thoughts could be rising within her, unaware that girls catch certain meanings late, and suffer a fiery torture when these meanings are clear to them.  Rhoda called up the pride of her womanhood that she might despise the man who had dared to distrust her.  She kept her poppy colour throughout the day, so sensitive was this pride.  But most she was angered, after reflection, by the doubts which Robert appeared to cast on Dahlia, in setting his finger upon that burning line of Scripture.  It opened a whole black kingdom to her imagination, and first touched her visionary life with shade.  She was sincere in her ignorance that the doubts were her own, but they lay deep in unawakened recesses of the soul; it was by a natural action of her reason that she transferred and forced them upon him who had chanced to make them visible.

CHAPTER V

When young minds are set upon a distant object, they scarcely live for anything about them.  The drive to the station and the parting with Robert, the journey to London, which had latterly seemed to her secretly-distressed anticipation like a sunken city—­a place of wonder with the waters over it—­all passed by smoothly; and then it became necessary to call a cabman, for whom, as he did her the service to lift her box, Rhoda felt a gracious respect, until a quarrel ensued between him and her uncle concerning sixpence;—­a poor sum, as she thought; but representing, as Anthony impressed upon her understanding during the conflict of hard words, a principle.  Those who can persuade

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Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.