He stood staring round him, and telling himself that he knew how it had happened--oh yes, he could see it all--how at the moment of George's death Catherine, flooded with pity, with grief, perhaps with love now that she was no longer obliged to love, had clung on to his arrangements, not suffering a thing to be touched or moved or altered, pathetically anxious to keep it exactly as he used to, to keep him still alive at least in his furniture. Other widows he had heard of had done this; and widowers--but fewer of them--had done it too. He could imagine it easily, if one loved some one very much, or was desperately sorry because one hadn't. But to go on year after year? Yet, once one had begun, how stop? There was only one way to stop happily and naturally, and that was to marry again.