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    Chapter 9 - Page 2

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    taken to affect a cosmopolitan naughtiness which he was far from possessing.

    "Well," said he, "I cannot help it if they do disapprove of me. There are certain irremovable barriers between myself and them, and I must accept them."

    "We all have our limitations, I suppose," said wise Lucy.

    "Sometimes they are forced on us, though," said Cecil, who saw from her remark that she did not quite understand his position.

    "How?"

    "It makes a difference doesn't it, whether we fully fence ourselves in, or whether we are fenced out by the barriers of others?"

    She thought a moment, and agreed that it did make a difference.

    "Difference?" cried Mrs. Honeychurch, suddenly alert. "I don't see any difference. Fences are fences, especially when they are in the same place."

    "We were speaking of motives," said Cecil, on whom the interruption jarred.

    "My dear Cecil, look here." She spread out her knees and perched her card-case on her lap. "This is me. That's Windy Corner. The rest of the pattern is the other people. Motives are all very well, but the fence comes here."

    "We weren't talking of real fences," said Lucy, laughing.

    "Oh, I see, dear--poetry."

    She leant placidly back. Cecil wondered why Lucy had been amused.

    "I tell you who has no 'fences,' as you call them," she said, "and that's Mr. Beebe."

    "A parson fenceless would mean a parson defenceless."

    Lucy was slow to follow what people said, but quick enough to detect what they meant. She missed Cecil's epigram, but grasped the feeling that prompted it.

    "Don't you like Mr. Beebe?" she asked thoughtfully.

    "I never said so!" he cried. "I consider him far above the average. I only denied--" And he swept off on the subject of fences again, and was brilliant.

    "Now, a clergyman that I do hate," said she wanting to say something sympathetic, "a clergyman that does have fences, and the most dreadful ones, is Mr. Eager, the English chaplain at Florence. He was truly insincere--not merely the manner unfortunate. He was a snob, and so conceited, and he did say such unkind things."

    "What sort of things?"

    "There was an old man at the Bertolini whom he said had murdered his wife."

    "Perhaps he had."

    "No!"


    "Why 'no'?"

    "He was such a nice old man, I'm sure."

    Cecil laughed at her feminine inconsequence.

    "Well, I did try to sift the thing. Mr. Eager would never come to the point. He prefers it vague--said the old man had 'practically' murdered his wife--had murdered her in the sight of God."

    "Hush, dear!" said Mrs. Honeychurch absently. "But isn't it intolerable that a person whom we're told to imitate should go round spreading slander? It was, I believe, chiefly owing to him that the old man was dropped. People pretended he was vulgar, but he
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