them may know perfectly well that they are possibly buying a
month’s pleasure with a life’s discomfort. No doubt my father and
mother, and your father and mother, saw it, if they at all resembled
us in habits of observation. But then they went and married just the
same, because they had ordinary passions. But you, Sue, are such a
phantasmal, bodiless creature,* one who––if you’ll allow me to say
it––has so little animal passion in you, that you can act upon reason
in the matter, when we poor unfortunate wretches of grosser
substance can’t.’
‘Well,’ she sighed, ‘you’ve owned that it would probably end in
misery for us. And I am not so exceptional a woman as you think.
Fewer women like marriage than you suppose, only they enter into it
for the dignity it is assumed to confer, and the social advantages it
gains them sometimes––a dignity and an advantage that I am quite
willing to do without.’
Jude fell back upon his old complaint––that, intimate as they
were, he had never once had from her an honest, candid declaration
that she loved or could love him.* ‘I really fear sometimes that you
cannot,’ he said, with a dubiousness approaching anger. ‘And you are
so reticent. I know that women are taught by other women that they
must never admit the full truth to a man. But the highest form of
a
ffection is based on full sincerity on both sides. Not being men,
these women don’t know that in looking back on those he has had
tender relations with, a man’s heart returns closest to her who was
the soul of truth in her conduct. The better class of man, even if
caught by airy a
ffectations* of dodging and parrying, is not retained
by them. A Nemesis attends the woman who plays the game of
elusiveness too often, in the utter contempt for her that, sooner or
later, her old admirers feel; under which they allow her to go
unlamented to her grave.’
Sue, who was regarding the distance, had acquired a guilty look;
and she suddenly replied in a tragic voice: ‘I don’t think I like you
to-day so well as I did, Jude!’
‘Don’t you? Why?’
‘O, well––You are not nice––too sermony. Though I suppose I am
so bad and worthless that I deserve the utmost rigour of lecturing!’
‘No, you are not bad. You are a dear. But as slippery as an eel when
I want to get a confession from you.’
‘O yes I am bad, and obstinate, and all sorts! It is no use your
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