BOOK II. OLD AND YOUNG.
20. CHAPTER XX.
 (continued)
Dorothea rose to leave the table and Mr. Casaubon made no reply,
 taking up a letter which lay beside him as if to reperuse it. 
 Both were shocked at their mutual situation--that each should
 have betrayed anger towards the other.  If they had been at home,
 settled at Lowick in ordinary life among their neighbors, the clash
 would have been less embarrassing:  but on a wedding journey,
 the express object of which is to isolate two people on the ground
 that they are all the world to each other, the sense of disagreement is,
 to say the least, confounding and stultifying.  To have changed
 your longitude extensively and placed yourselves in a moral
 solitude in order to have small explosions, to find conversation
 difficult and to hand a glass of water without looking, can hardly
 be regarded as satisfactory fulfilment even to the toughest minds. 
 To Dorothea's inexperienced sensitiveness, it seemed like a catastrophe,
 changing all prospects; and to Mr. Casaubon it was a new pain,
 he never having been on a wedding journey before, or found himself
 in that close union which was more of a subjection than he had been
 able to imagine, since this charming young bride not only obliged
 him to much consideration on her behalf (which he had sedulously
 given), but turned out to be capable of agitating him cruelly just
 where he most needed soothing.  Instead of getting a soft fence
 against the cold, shadowy, unapplausive audience of his life, had he
 only given it a more substantial presence? 
Neither of them felt it possible to speak again at present. 
 To have reversed a previous arrangement and declined to go out would
 have been a show of persistent anger which Dorothea's conscience
 shrank from, seeing that she already began to feel herself guilty. 
 However just her indignation might be, her ideal was not to
 claim justice, but to give tenderness.  So when the carriage
 came to the door, she drove with Mr. Casaubon to the Vatican,
 walked with him through the stony avenue of inscriptions, and when
 she parted with him at the entrance to the Library, went on through
 the Museum out of mere listlessness as to what was around her. 
 She had not spirit to turn round and say that she would drive anywhere. 
 It was when Mr. Casaubon was quitting her that Naumann had first
 seen her, and he had entered the long gallery of sculpture at
 the same time with her; but here Naumann had to await Ladislaw
 with whom he was to settle a bet of champagne about an enigmatical
 mediaeval-looking figure there.  After they had examined the figure,
 and had walked on finishing their dispute, they had parted,
 Ladislaw lingering behind while Naumann had gone into the Hall
 of Statues where he again saw Dorothea, and saw her in that brooding
 abstraction which made her pose remarkable.  She did not really see
 the streak of sunlight on the floor more than she saw the statues: 
 she was inwardly seeing the light of years to come in her own home
 and over the English fields and elms and hedge-bordered highroads;
 and feeling that the way in which they might be filled with joyful
 devotedness was not so clear to her as it had been.  But in Dorothea's
 mind there was a current into which all thought and feeling were
 apt sooner or later to flow--the reaching forward of the whole
 consciousness towards the fullest truth, the least partial good. 
 There was clearly something better than anger and despondency. 
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