It is certain that if Sir George Soane had borne any other name, the

girl, after the conversation which had taken place between them on the

dingy staircase at Oxford, must have hated him. There is a kind of

condescension from man to woman, in which the man says, 'My good girl,

not for me--but do take care of yourself,' which a woman of the least

pride finds to be of all modes of treatment the most shameful and the

most humiliating.

The masterful overtures of such a lover as Dunborough,

who would take all by storm, are still natural, though they lack

respect; a woman would be courted, and sometimes would be courted in the

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old rough fashion. But, for the other mode of treatment, she may be a

Grizel, or as patient--a short course of that will sharpen not only her

tongue, but her fingernails.

Yet this, or something like it, Julia, who was far from being the most

patient woman in the world, had suffered at Sir George's hands;

believing at the time that he was some one else, or, rather, being

ignorant then and for just an hour afterwards that such a person as Sir

George Soane existed.

Enlightened on this point and on some others

connected with it (which a sagacious reader may divine for himself) the

girl's first feeling in face of the astonishing future opening before

her had been one of spiteful exultation. She hated him, and he would

suffer. She hated him with all her heart and strength, and he would

suffer. There were balm and sweet satisfaction in the thought.

But presently, dwelling on the matter, she began to relent. The very

completeness of the revenge which she had in prospect robbed her of her

satisfaction. The man was so dependent on her, so deeply indebted to

her, must suffer so much by reason of her, that the maternal instinct,

which is said to be developed even in half-grown girls, took him under

its protection; and when that scene occurred in the public room of the

Castle Inn and he stood forward to shield her (albeit in an arrogant,

careless, half-insolent way that must have wounded her in other

circumstances), she was not content to forgive him only--with a smile;

but long after her companion had fallen asleep, Julia sat brooding over

the fire, her arms clasped about her knees; now reading the embers with

parted lips and shining eyes, and now sighing gently--for 'la femme

propose, mais Dieu dispose.' And nothing is certain.

After this, it may not have been pure accident that cast her in Sir

George's way when he strolled out of the house next morning. A coach had

come in, and was changing horses before the porch. The passengers were

moving to and fro before the house, grooms and horse-boys were shouting

and hissing, the guard was throwing out parcels. Soane passed through

the bustle, and, strolling to the end of the High Street, saw the girl

seated on a low parapet of the bridge that, near the end of the inn

gardens, carries the Salisbury road over the Kennet. She wore a plain

riding-coat, such as ladies then affected when they travelled and would

avoid their hoops and patches. A little hood covered her hair, which,

undressed and unpowdered, hung in a club behind; and she held up a plain

fan between her complexion and the sun.




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