[The Three Clerks by Anthony Trollope]@TWC D-Link book
The Three Clerks

CHAPTER XXXV
10/18

'I can assure you Mr.Tudor will manage very well for himself--but should any misfortune happen to him he will not, you may be certain, attribute it to Lord Gaberlunzie.' 'I am told that Sir Gregory is most opposed to it,' continued Mrs.Val.

'I heard that from Mr.Neverbend, who is altogether in Sir Gregory's confidence--did not you, my dears ?' and she turned round to the sisters of Fidus for confirmation.
'I heard my brother say that as Mr.Tudor's office is not parliamentary but permanent, and as he has to attend from ten till four----' 'Alaric has not to attend from ten till four,' said Gertrude, who could not endure the idea that her husband should be ranked with common clerks, like Fidus Neverbend.
'Oh, I didn't know,' said Lactimel, meekly.

'Perhaps Fidus only meant that as it is one of those offices where the people have something to do, the commissioners couldn't be in their offices and in Parliament at the same time.' 'I did understand,' said Ugolina, 'that Sir Gregory Hardlines had put his veto upon it; but I must confess that it is a subject which I have not sufficiently studied to enable me----' 'It's L1,200 a year, isn't it ?' asked the bride.
'Twelve hundred pounds a year,' said her mother--'a very serious consideration when there is no private fortune to back it, on either side.

Now if it were Victoire----' 'He couldn't sit in Parliament, ma, because he's an alien--only for that I shouldn't think of his doing anything else.' 'Perhaps that may be altered before long,' said Lactimel, graciously.
'If Jews are to be admitted,' said Ugolina, 'who certainly belong to an alien nation; a nation expressly set apart and separated from all people--a peculiar nation distinct from all others, I for one cannot discern----' What Ugolina could or could not discern about the Jews was communicated perhaps to Madame Jaquetanape or to Lactimel, but not to Gertrude or to Mrs.Val; for the latter, taking Gertrude apart into a corner as it were of the sofa, began confidentially to repeat to her her fears about her husband.
'I see, my dear,' said she, 'that you don't like my speaking about it.' 'Upon my word,' said Gertrude, 'I am very indifferent about it.
But would it not be better if you said what you have to say to my husband ?' 'I intend to do so.

I intend to do that also.


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