[The March Family Trilogy by William Dean Howells]@TWC D-Link book
The March Family Trilogy

PART THIRD
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If she had escaped this effect she was willing to leave the rest with Providence.
VIII.
The notion that a girl of Margaret Vance's traditions would naturally form of girls like Christine and Mela Dryfoos would be that they were abashed in the presence of the new conditions of their lives, and that they must receive the advance she had made them with a certain grateful humility.

However they received it, she had made it upon principle, from a romantic conception of duty; but this was the way she imagined they would receive it, because she thought that she would have done so if she had been as ignorant and unbred as they.

Her error was in arguing their attitude from her own temperament, and endowing them, for the purposes of argument, with her perspective.

They had not the means, intellectual or moral, of feeling as she fancied.

If they had remained at home on the farm where they were born, Christine would have grown up that embodiment of impassioned suspicion which we find oftenest in the narrowest spheres, and Mela would always have been a good-natured simpleton; but they would never have doubted their equality with the wisest and the finest.


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