[A Life’s Morning by George Gissing]@TWC D-Link book
A Life’s Morning

CHAPTER XX
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Triumph had been his aim as a schoolboy; he held it fitting that as a man he should become prominent amongst his fellows.

This of politics was the easiest way.

To be sure, he told himself that it was a way he would once have sneered at, that it was to rub shoulders with men altogether his inferiors in culture, that, had he held to the ideals of his youth, a longer, a wearier course would have been his, and the chance of a simpler, nobler crown.

But he had the gift of speech, and by an effort could absorb himself as completely in blue-books as in the pages of historian or poet.

An hour such as this was the first of his rewards.
Two there were in this assembly who turned their eyes upon him with adoration which could scarcely have fallen short of Wilfrid's utmost demands.


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