[Mary Anerley by R. D. Blackmore]@TWC D-Link book
Mary Anerley

CHAPTER XXIII
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In return for all these wonders, what should poor I have to do ?" "Poor I would only have to say just once, 'Robin, I will have you, and begin to try to love you.'" "I am afraid that it has been done long ago; and the thing that I ought to do is to try and help it." What happened upon this it would be needless to report, and not only needless, but a vast deal worse--shabby, interloping, meddlesome and mean, undignified, unmanly, and disreputably low; for even the tanner and his wife (who must have had right to come forward, if anybody had) felt that their right was a shadow, and kept back as if they were a hundred miles away, and took one another by the hand and nodded, as much as to say: "You remember how we did it; better than that, my dear.

Here is your good health." This being so, and the time so sacred to the higher emotions, even the boldest intruder should endeavor to check his ardor for intrusion.
Without any inkling of Preventive Force, Robin and Mary, having once done away with all that stood between them, found it very difficult to be too near together; because of all the many things that each had for to say.

They seemed to get into an unwise condition of longing to know matters that surely could not matter.

When did each of them first feel sure of being meant only for the other nobler one?
At first sight, of course, and with a perfect gift of seeing how much loftier each was than the other; and what an extraordinary fact it was that in everything imaginable they were quite alike, except in the palpable certainty possessed by each of the betterness of the other.

What an age it seemed since first they met, positively without thinking, and in the very middle of a skirmish, yet with a remarkable drawing out of perceptions one anotherward! Did Mary feel this, when she acted so cleverly, and led away those vile pursuers?
and did Robin, when his breath came back, discover why his heart was glowing in the rabbit-hole?
Questions of such depth can not be fathomed in a moment; and even to attempt to do any justice to them, heads must be very long laid together.


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