[A Life’s Morning by George Gissing]@TWC D-Link book
A Life’s Morning

CHAPTER XI
49/54

Her views were often strangely at variance with those of the social tribunal which sits in judgment on virtue and vice.

To her, for instance, the woman who sells herself with ecclesiastical sanction differed only in degree of impurity from her whose track is under the street-lamps.

She was not censorious, she was not self-righteous; she spoke to no one of the convictions that ruled her, and to herself held them a mystery of holiness, a revelation of high things vouchsafed she knew not whence nor how.

Suppose her to have been heart-free at this juncture of her fate, think you she would have found it a whit less impossible to save her father by becoming Dagworthy's wife.

There was in her thought but one parallel to this dire choice which lay before her: it was the means offered to Isabel of rescuing her brother Claudio.


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