BOOK 7 CHAPTER 1
turn to the Mill
BEtEEN four and five oclock on ternoon of t on Oggs, tom tulliver anding on tside t Dorlcote Mill. er teady self-government and energetic tainment of more tability ullivers. But toms face, as ood in t still suns summer afternoon, riump. s bitterest expression, s and deepest fold, as farto ser ting o s, began to er eamer from Mudport and put an end to all improbable suppositions of an accident on ter by stating t ep. ould t ne s? Probably t s married: toms mind to tation of t t could deat disgrace.
As orance gate, and oream, a tall dark-eyed figure, t o look at -beating . afraid, from fear t endure to alienate from us. t deep-rooted fear urning to ural refuge t ion under trospect of ted - s desired to endure ty of toms reproof, to submit in patient silence to t against seemed no more t to outer purpose ion of her own conscience.
Maggie on York for a day prostrating o folloerrible strain of t. till about ressed. Sed tce and om did not e - t ly turned, and lifting up o ion of conjectures. rembling and and indignation.
Maggie paused too - t tred in it rus s speak.
`tom-- sly, `I am come back to you - I am come back o tell you everything -
`You friends. You ful - no motives are strong enougo restrain you. I o me.
to tood paralysed by toms words.
`tom, said Maggie, so guilty as you believe me to be. I never meant to give o my feelings. I struggled against too far in t to come back on