[Barchester Towers by Anthony Trollope]@TWC D-Link bookBarchester Towers CHAPTER XIII 14/16
She had early foreseen the marriage of Eleanor and John Bold; she had at a glance deciphered the character of the new bishop and his chaplain; could it possibly be that her present surmise should ever come forth as true? "But you don't think that she likes him ?" said Mr.Harding again. "Well, Papa, I can't say that I think she dislikes him as she ought to do.
Why is he visiting there as a confidential friend, when he never ought to have been admitted inside the house? Why is it that she speaks to him about your welfare and your position, as she clearly has done? At the bishop's party the other night I saw her talking to him for half an hour at the stretch." "I thought Mr.Slope seemed to talk to nobody there but that daughter of Stanhope's," said Mr.Harding, wishing to defend his child. "Oh, Mr.Slope is a cleverer man than you think of, Papa, and keeps more than one iron in the fire." To give Eleanor her due, any suspicion as to the slightest inclination on her part towards Mr.Slope was a wrong to her.
She had no more idea of marrying Mr.Slope than she had of marrying the bishop, and the idea that Mr.Slope would present himself as a suitor had never occurred to her.
Indeed, to give her her due again, she had never thought about suitors since her husband's death.
But nevertheless it was true that she had overcome all that repugnance to the man which was so strongly felt for him by the rest of the Grantly faction.
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