[John Caldigate by Anthony Trollope]@TWC D-Link bookJohn Caldigate CHAPTER XXVI 18/23
No one could take his wife away from him,--unless, indeed, the law were to say that she was not his wife.
But how would it be with him if she herself, under the influence of her family, were to wish to leave him! The law no doubt would give him the custody of his own wife, till the law had said that she was not his wife.
But could he keep her if she asked him to let her go? And should she be made to doubt,--should her mind be so troubled as it would be should she once be taught to think it possible that she had been betrayed,--would she not then want to go from him? Would it not be probable that she would doubt when she should be told that this woman had been called by her husband's name in Australia, and when he should be unable to deny that he had admitted, or at least had not contradicted, the appellation? On a sudden, when he turned away from the street leading to Chesterton as he came out of the College, he resolved that he would at once go back to Robert Bolton.
The man was offensive, suspicious and self-willed; but, nevertheless, his good services, if they could be secured, would be all-important.
For his wife's sake, as Caldigate said to himself,--for his wife's sake he must bear much.
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