[The Man by Bram Stoker]@TWC D-Link bookThe Man CHAPTER VII--THE NEED OF KNOWING 12/32
I want to hear both sides, too! If people are guilty, I want to know the cause of their guilt.
If they are innocent, I want to know what the circumstances can be which make innocence look like guilt.
In my own daily life I may be in the way of just such judgments; and surely it is only right that judgment should be just!' Again she paused; there rose before her mind that conversation in the churchyard when Harold had said that it was difficult for women to be just. Miss Rowly reflected too.
She was becoming convinced that in principle the girl was right.
But the details were repugnant as ever to her; concentrating her mind on the point where she felt the ground firm under her, she made her objection: 'But, Stephen dear, there are so many cases that are sordid and painful!' 'The more need to know of sordid things; if sordidness plays so important a part in the tragedy of their lives!' 'But there are cases which are not within a woman's province.
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