BOOK VIII. SUNSET AND SUNRISE.
82. CHAPTER LXXXII.
 (continued)
Thus he did nothing more decided than taking the Riverston coach. 
 He came back again by it while it was still daylight, having made
 up his mind that he must go to Lydgate's that evening. 
 The Rubicon, we know, was a very insignificant stream to look at;
 its significance lay entirely in certain invisible conditions. 
 Will felt as if he were forced to cross his small boundary ditch,
 and what he saw beyond it was not empire, but discontented subjection. 
But it is given to us sometimes even in our every-day life to
 witness the saving influence of a noble nature, the divine efficacy
 of rescue that may lie in a self-subduing act of fellowship. 
 If Dorothea, after her night's anguish, had not taken that walk
 to Rosamond--why, she perhaps would have been a woman who gained
 a higher character for discretion, but it would certainly not have
 been as well for those three who were on one hearth in Lydgate's
 house at half-past seven that evening. 
Rosamond had been prepared for Will's visit, and she received him with a
 languid coldness which Lydgate accounted for by her nervous exhaustion,
 of which he could not suppose that it had any relation to Will. 
 And when she sat in silence bending over a bit of work, he innocently
 apologized for her in an indirect way by begging her to lean backward
 and rest.  Will was miserable in the necessity for playing the part
 of a friend who was making his first appearance and greeting to Rosamond,
 while his thoughts were busy about her feeling since that scene
 of yesterday, which seemed still inexorably to enclose them both,
 like the painful vision of a double madness.  It happened that nothing
 called Lydgate out of the room; but when Rosamond poured out the tea,
 and Will came near to fetch it, she placed a tiny bit of folded
 paper in his saucer.  He saw it and secured it quickly, but as he
 went back to his inn he had no eagerness to unfold the paper. 
 What Rosamond had written to him would probably deepen the painful
 impressions of the evening.  Still, he opened and read it by his
 bed-candle. There were only these few words in her neatly flowing hand:-- 
"I have told Mrs. Casaubon.  She is not under any mistake about you. 
 I told her because she came to see me and was very kind.  You will
 have nothing to reproach me with now.  I shall not have made any
 difference to you." 
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