[Life and Gabriella by Ellen Glasgow]@TWC D-Link bookLife and Gabriella CHAPTER IV 28/45
"I shouldn't think he was worth hankerin' after, myself, but you've looked kind of peaked and thin this spring, so I've just been wonderin'." "I never loved George.
It was madness, nothing else," returned Gabriella, and she really believed it. "Well, your thinkin' it madness now don't mean it wan't love ten years ago," commented Miss Polly, with the shrewdness of a detached and observant spinster. "I suppose you're right," admitted Gabriella thoughtfully.
Though she had not mentioned Arthur, her mind was full of him, and she was perfectly convinced that she had loved him all her life--even during her brief period of "madness." It was a higher love, she felt, so much higher, indeed, that it had been too spiritual, too ethereal, to take root in the earthly soil from which her passion for George had sprung. But, if it were not love, why was it that every faint stirring of her emotions revived the memory so poignantly? Why was it that Miss Polly's sentimental interpretation of the doctor's interest evoked the image of Arthur? "No, I never think of George--never," she repeated, and her fine, pure features assumed an expression of sternness.
"But I shan't marry again," she went on after a pause in which Miss Polly's sewing-machine buzzed cheerfully over its work.
"I've had enough of marriage to last me for one lifetime." The machine stopped, and Miss Polly, snipping the thread as she came to the end of a seam, turned squarely to answer.
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