CodalSearch this book — or all of Codal…⌘K
nydus/RomolaPublic

A young Florentine woman’s life is buffeted by betrayal in love and upheaval in religion.

Page 93 of 765
Table of Contents

VI

“You are mistaken,” said Romola; “I am by no means sufficient to my father: I have not the gifts that are necessary for scholarship.”

Romola did not make this self-depreciatory statement in a tone of anxious humility, but with a proud gravity.

“Nay, my Romola,” said her father, not willing that the stranger should have too low a conception of his daughter’s powers; “thou art not destitute of gifts; rather, thou art endowed beyond the measure of women; but thou hast withal the woman’s delicate frame, which ever craves repose and variety, and so begets a wandering imagination. My daughter,”⁠—turning to Tito⁠—“has been very precious to me, filling up to the best of her power the place of a son. For I had once a son⁠ ⁠…”

Bardo checked himself: he did not wish to assume an attitude of complaint in the presence of a stranger, and he remembered that this young man, in whom he had unexpectedly become so much interested, was still a stranger, towards whom it became him rather to keep the position of a patron. His pride was roused to double activity by the fear that he had forgotten his

93