| BOOK V. THE DEAD HAND.
47. CHAPTER XLVII.
 (continued)
         "Queens hereafter might be glad to live
          Upon the alms of her superfluous praise."But this result was questionable.  And what else could he do
 for Dorothea?  What was his devotion worth to her?  It was impossible
 to tell.  He would not go out of her reach.  He saw no creature among
 her friends to whom he could believe that she spoke with the same simple
 confidence as to him.  She had once said that she would like him to stay;
 and stay he would, whatever fire-breathing dragons might hiss around her. This had always been the conclusion of Will's hesitations. 
 But he was not without contradictoriness and rebellion even towards
 his own resolve.  He had often got irritated, as he was on this
 particular night, by some outside demonstration that his public
 exertions with Mr. Brooke as a chief could not seem as heroic
 as he would like them to be, and this was always associated with
 the other ground of irritation--that notwithstanding his sacrifice
 of dignity for Dorothea's sake, he could hardly ever see her. 
 Whereupon, not being able to contradict these unpleasant facts,
 he contradicted his own strongest bias and said, "I am a fool." Nevertheless, since the inward debate necessarily turned on Dorothea,
 he ended, as he had done before, only by getting a livelier sense
 of what her presence would be to him; and suddenly reflecting that
 the morrow would be Sunday, he determined to go to Lowick Church
 and see her.  He slept upon that idea, but when he was dressing
 in the rational morning light, Objection said-- "That will be a virtual defiance of Mr. Casaubon's prohibition
 to visit Lowick, and Dorothea will be displeased." "Nonsense!" argued Inclination, "it would be too monstrous
 for him to hinder me from going out to a pretty country church
 on a spring morning.  And Dorothea will be glad." "It will be clear to Mr. Casaubon that you have come either to annoy
 him or to see Dorothea." |