[The Three Clerks by Anthony Trollope]@TWC D-Link bookThe Three Clerks CHAPTER XIV 13/24
The recovery from a fainting fit, a real fainting fit I beg young ladies to understand, brings with it a most unpleasant sensation, and for some minutes Linda's sorrow was quelled by her sufferings; but as she recovered her strength she remembered where she was and what had happened, and sobbing violently she burst into an hysterical storm of tears. Her most poignant feeling now was one of fear lest her mother should have guessed her secret; and this Mrs.Woodward well understood.
She could do nothing towards comforting her child till there was perfect confidence between them.
It was easy to arrive at this with Linda, nor would it afterwards be difficult to persuade her as to the course she ought to take.
The two girls were so essentially different; the one so eager to stand alone and guide herself, the other so prone to lean on the nearest support that came to her hand. It was not long before Linda had told her mother everything. Either by words, or tears, or little signs of mute confession, she made her mother understand, with all but exactness, what had passed between Alaric and herself, and quite exactly what had been the state of her own heart.
She sobbed, and wept, and looked up to her mother for forgiveness as though she had been guilty of a great sin; and when her mother caressed her with all a mother's tenderness, and told her that she was absolved from all fault, free of all blame, she was to a certain degree comforted. Whatever might now happen, her mother would be on her side.
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