The result of Osborne's conference with the two doctors had been

certain prescriptions which appeared to have done him much good,

and which would in all probability have done him yet more, could he

have been free of the recollection of the little patient wife in

her solitude near Winchester. He went to her whenever he could; and,

thanks to Roger, money was far more plentiful with him now than it

had been. But he still shrank, and perhaps even more and more, from

telling his father of his marriage. Some bodily instinct made him

dread all agitation inexpressibly. If he had not had this money from

Roger, he might have been compelled to tell his father all, and to

ask for the necessary funds to provide for the wife and the coming

child. But with enough in hand, and a secret, though remorseful,

conviction that as long as Roger had a penny his brother was sure to

have half of it, made him more reluctant than ever to irritate his

father by a revelation of his secret. "Not just yet, not just at

present," he kept saying both to Roger and to himself. "By-and-by, if

we have a boy, I will call it Roger"--and then visions of poetical

and romantic reconciliations brought about between father and son,

through the medium of a child, the offspring of a forbidden marriage,

became still more vividly possible to him, and at any rate it was a

staving-off of an unpleasant thing. He atoned to himself for taking

so much of Roger's Fellowship money by reflecting that, if Roger

married, he would lose this source of revenue; yet Osborne was

throwing no impediment in the way of this event, rather forwarding it

by promoting every possible means of his brother's seeing the lady of

his love. Osborne ended his reflections by convincing himself of his

own generosity.




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