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    Book 1 - Chapter 8 - Page 2

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    like snatching hastily at a single thread. It was owing to this
    promptitude that Mr. Tulliver was on horseback soon after dinner the
    next day (he was not dyspeptic) on his way to Basset to see his sister
    Moss and her husband. For having made up his mind irrevocably that he
    would pay Mrs. Glegg her loan of five hundred pounds, it naturally
    occurred to him that he had a promissory note for three hundred pounds
    lent to his brother-in-law Moss; and if the said brother-in-law could
    manage to pay in the money within a given time, it would go far to
    lessen the fallacious air of inconvenience which Mr. Tulliver's
    spirited step might have worn in the eyes of weak people who require
    to know precisely _how_ a thing is to be done before they are strongly
    confident that it will be easy.

    For Mr. Tulliver was in a position neither new nor striking, but, like
    other every-day things, sure to have a cumulative effect that will be
    felt in the long run: he was held to be a much more substantial man
    than he really was. And as we are all apt to believe what the world
    believes about us, it was his habit to think of failure and ruin with
    the same sort of remote pity with which a spare, long-necked man hears
    that his plethoric short-necked neighbor is stricken with apoplexy. He
    had been always used to hear pleasant jokes about his advantages as a
    man who worked his own mill, and owned a pretty bit of land; and these
    jokes naturally kept up his sense that he was a man of considerable
    substance. They gave a pleasant flavor to his glass on a market-day,
    and if it had not been for the recurrence of half-yearly payments, Mr.
    Tulliver would really have forgotten that there was a mortgage of two
    thousand pounds on his very desirable freehold. That was not
    altogether his own fault, since one of the thousand pounds was his
    sister's fortune, which he had to pay on her marriage; and a man who
    has neighbors that _will_ go to law with him is not likely to pay off
    his mortgages, especially if he enjoys the good opinion of
    acquaintances who want to borrow a hundred pounds on security too
    lofty to be represented by parchment. Our friend Mr. Tulliver had a
    good-natured fibre in him, and did not like to give harsh refusals

    even to his sister, who had not only come in to the world in that
    superfluous way characteristic of sisters, creating a necessity for
    mortgages, but had quite thrown herself away in marriage, and had
    crowned her mistakes by having an eighth baby. On this point Mr.
    Tulliver was conscious of being a little weak; but he apologized to
    himself by saying that poor Gritty had been a good-looking wench
    before she married Moss; he would sometimes say this even with a
    slight tremulousness in his voice. But this morning he was in a
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