The Mill on the Floss George Eliot (ereader android .txt) đ
- Author: George Eliot
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Tom looked away from Maggie, knitting his brow more strongly for a little while. Then he turned to her and said, slowly and emphaticallyâ â
âYou know what is my feeling on that subject, Maggie. There is no need for my repeating anything I said a year ago. While my father was living, I felt bound to use the utmost power over you, to prevent you from disgracing him as well as yourself, and all of us. But now I must leave you to your own choice. You wish to be independent; you told me so after my fatherâs death. My opinion is not changed. If you think of Philip Wakem as a lover again, you must give up me.â
âI donât wish it, dear Tom, at least as things are; I see that it would lead to misery. But I shall soon go away to another situation, and I should like to be friends with him again while I am here. Lucy wishes it.â
The severity of Tomâs face relaxed a little.
âI shouldnât mind your seeing him occasionally at my uncleâsâ âI donât want you to make a fuss on the subject. But I have no confidence in you, Maggie. You would be led away to do anything.â
That was a cruel word. Maggieâs lip began to tremble.
âWhy will you say that, Tom? It is very hard of you. Have I not done and borne everything as well as I could? And I kept my word to youâ âwhenâ âwhenâ âMy life has not been a happy one, any more than yours.â
She was obliged to be childish; the tears would come. When Maggie was not angry, she was as dependent on kind or cold words as a daisy on the sunshine or the cloud; the need of being loved would always subdue her, as, in old days, it subdued her in the worm-eaten attic. The brotherâs goodness came uppermost at this appeal, but it could only show itself in Tomâs fashion. He put his hand gently on her arm, and said, in the tone of a kind pedagogueâ â
âNow listen to me, Maggie. Iâll tell you what I mean. Youâre always in extremes; you have no judgment and self-command; and yet you think you know best, and will not submit to be guided. You know I didnât wish you to take a situation. My aunt Pullet was willing to give you a good home, and you might have lived respectably amongst your relations, until I could have provided a home for you with my mother. And that is what I should like to do. I wished my sister to be a lady, and I always have taken care of you, as my father desired, until you were well married. But your ideas and mine never accord, and you will not give way. Yet you might have sense enough to see that a brother, who goes out into the world and mixes with men, necessarily knows better what is right and respectable for his sister than she can know herself. You think I am not kind; but my kindness can only be directed by what I believe to be good for you.â
âYes, I know, dear Tom,â said Maggie, still half-sobbing, but trying to control her tears. âI know you would do a great deal for me; I know how you work, and donât spare yourself. I am grateful to you. But, indeed, you canât quite judge for me; our natures are very different. You donât know how differently things affect me from what they do you.â
âYes, I do know; I know it too well. I know how differently you must feel about all that affects our family, and your own dignity as a young woman, before you could think of receiving secret addresses from Philip Wakem. If it was not disgusting to me in every other way, I should object to my sisterâs name being associated for a moment with that of a young man whose father must hate the very thought of us all, and would spurn you. With anyone but you, I should think it quite certain that what you witnessed just before my fatherâs death would secure you from ever thinking again of Philip Wakem as a lover. But I donât feel certain of it with you; I never feel certain about anything with you. At one time you take pleasure in a sort of perverse self-denial, and at another you have not resolution to resist a thing that you know to be wrong.â
There was a terrible cutting truth in Tomâs wordsâ âthat hard rind of truth which is discerned by unimaginative, unsympathetic minds. Maggie always writhed under this judgment of Tomâs; she rebelled and was humiliated in the same moment; it seemed as if he held a glass before her to show her her own folly and weakness, as if he were a prophetic voice predicting her future fallings; and yet, all the while, she judged him in return; she said inwardly that he was narrow and unjust, that he was below feeling those mental needs which were often the source of the wrongdoing or absurdity that made her life a planless riddle to him.
She did not answer directly; her heart was too full, and she sat down, leaning her arm on the table. It was no use trying to make Tom feel that she was near to him. He always repelled her. Her feeling under his words was complicated by the allusion to the last scene between her father and Wakem; and at length that painful, solemn memory surmounted the immediate grievance. No! She did not think of such things with frivolous indifference, and Tom must not accuse her of that. She looked up at him with a grave, earnest gaze and saidâ â
âI canât make you think better of me, Tom, by anything
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