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Updated: June 16, 2025
Welwright says he's going to take her to Venice. Well, I'm sorry sorry for your going, Clementina, and I'm truly sorry for the cause of it. I shall miss you, my dear, I shall indeed. You know I always wanted to steal you, but you'll do me the justice to say I never did, and I won't try, now."
Welwright go away believing that she had not cared enough for the offer which had surprised her so much, and she blamed herself for not telling him how doubly bound she was to Gregory; though when she tried to put her sense of this in words to herself she could not make out that she was any more bound to him than she had been before they met in Florence, unless she wished to be so.
She should meet some pleasant people; she always did, at Miss Milray's. Then the light died out of her gay eyes, and she set her lips. "No, I told her I shouldn't go." "I didn't hear you," said Dr. Welwright. "A doctor has no eyes and ears except for the symptoms of his patients." "Oh, I know," said Clementina. She had liked Dr.
Welwright professed himself ready for his departure, at breakfast next morning and he must have made his preparations very late or very early. He was explicit in his charges to Clementina concerning Mrs. Lander, and at the end of them, he said, "She will not know when she is asking too much of you, but you will, and you must act upon your knowledge.
But I dare say it's more of his happiness you think." "Oh, I should like to be happy, too. There would be no sense in it if I wasn't." "No, certainly not." "Miss Milray," said Clementina, with a kind of abruptness, "do you eva hear anything from Dr. Welwright?" "No! Why?" Miss Milray fastened her gaze vividly upon her. "Oh, nothing. He wanted me to promise him, there in Venice, too."
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