Daniel Deronda George Eliot (best book clubs TXT) đ
- Author: George Eliot
Book online «Daniel Deronda George Eliot (best book clubs TXT) đ». Author George Eliot
Mrs. Meyrick gave no audible answer, but pressed her lips against Mirahâs forehead.
âSheâs just a pearl; the mud has only washed her,â was the fervid little womanâs closing commentary when, tĂȘte-Ă -tĂȘte with Deronda in the back parlor that evening, she had conveyed Mirahâs story to him with much vividness.
âWhat is your feeling about a search for this mother?â said Deronda. âHave you no fears? I have, I confess.â
âOh, I believe the motherâs good,â said Mrs. Meyrick, with rapid decisiveness; âor was good. She may be deadâ âthatâs my fear. A good woman, you may depend: you may know it by the scoundrel the father is. Where did the child get her goodness from? Wheaten flour has to be accounted for.â
Deronda was rather disappointed at this answer; he had wanted a confirmation of his own judgment, and he began to put in demurrers. The argument about the mother would not apply to the brother; and Mrs. Meyrick admitted that the brother might be an ugly likeness of the father. Then, as to advertising, if the name was Cohen, you might as well advertise for two undescribed terriers; and here Mrs. Meyrick helped him, for the idea of an advertisement, already mentioned to Mirah, had roused the poor childâs terror; she was convinced that her father would see itâ âhe saw everything in the papers. Certainly there were safer means than advertising; men might be set to work whose business it was to find missing persons; but Deronda wished Mrs. Meyrick to feel with him that it would be wiser to wait, before seeking a dubiousâ âperhaps a deplorable result; especially as he was engaged to go abroad the next week for a couple of months. If a search were made, he would like to be at hand, so that Mrs. Meyrick might not be unaided in meeting any consequencesâ âsupposing that she would generously continue to watch over Mirah.
âWe should be very jealous of anyone who took the task from us,â said Mrs. Meyrick. âShe will stay under my roof; there is Hansâs old room for her.â
âWill she be content to wait?â said Deronda, anxiously.
âNo trouble there. It is not her nature to run into planning and devising: only to submit. See how she submitted to that father! It was a wonder to herself how she found the will and contrivance to run away from him. About finding her mother, her only notion now is to trust; since you were sent to save her and we are good to her, she trusts that her mother will be found in the same unsought way. And when she is talking I catch her feeling like a child.â
Mrs. Meyrick hoped that the sum Deronda put into her hands as a provision for Mirahâs wants was more than would be needed; after a little while Mirah would perhaps like to occupy herself as the other girls did, and make herself independent. Deronda pleaded that she must need a long rest. âOh, yes; we will hurry nothing,â said Mrs. Meyrick.
âRely upon it, she shall be taken tender care of. If you like to give me your address abroad, I will write to let you know how we get on. It is not fair that we should have all the pleasure of her salvation to ourselves. And besides, I want to make believe that I am doing something for you as well as for Mirah.â
âThat is no make-believe. What should I have done without you last night? Everything would have gone wrong. I shall tell Hans that the best of having him for a friend is, knowing his mother.â
After that they joined the girls in the other room, where Mirah was seated placidly, while the others were telling her what they knew about Mr. Derondaâ âhis goodness to Hans, and all the virtues that Hans had reported of him.
âKate burns a pastille before his portrait every day,â said Mab. âAnd I carry his signature in a little black-silk bag round my neck to keep
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