FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   4016   4017   4018   4019   4020   4021   4022   4023   4024   4025   4026   4027   4028   4029   4030   4031   4032   4033   4034   4035   4036   4037   4038   4039   4040  
4041   4042   4043   4044   4045   4046   4047   4048   4049   4050   4051   4052   4053   4054   4055   4056   4057   4058   4059   4060   4061   4062   4063   4064   4065   >>   >|  
Lukin tried three days of their society, and was driven away headlong to Club-life. He sent down Redworth, with whom the walks of the zealous inquirers were profitable, though Diana, in acknowledging it to herself, reserved a decided preference for her foregone ethereal mood, larger, and untroubled by the presence of a man. The suspicion Emma had sown was not excited to an alarming activity; but she began to question: could the best of men be simply--a woman's friend?--was not long service rather less than a proof of friendship? She could be blind when her heart was on fire for another. Her passion for her liberty, however, received no ominous warning to look to the defences. He was the same blunt speaker, and knotted his brows as queerly as ever at Arthur, in a transparent calculation of how this fellow meant to gain his livelihood. She wilfully put it to the credit of Arthur's tact that his elder was amiable, without denying her debt to the good man for leaving her illness and her appearance unmentioned. He forbore even to scan her features. Diana's wan contemplativeness, in which the sparkle of meaning slowly rose to flash, as we see a bubble rising from the deeps of crystal waters, caught at his heart while he talked his matter-of-fact. But her instinct of a present safety was true. She and Arthur discovered--and it set her first meditating whether she did know the man so very accurately--that he had printed, for private circulation, when at Harrow School, a little book, a record of his observations in nature. Lady Dunstane was the casual betrayer. He shrugged at the nonsense of a boy's publishing; anybody's publishing he held for a doubtful proof of sanity. His excuse was, that he had not published opinions. Let us observe, and assist in our small sphere; not come mouthing to the footlights! 'We retire,' Diana said, for herself and Arthur. 'The wise thing, is to avoid the position that enforces publishing,' said he, to the discomposure of his raw junior. In the fields he was genially helpful; commending them to the study of the South-west wind, if they wanted to forecast the weather and understand the climate of our country. 'We have no Seasons, or only a shuffle of them. Old calendars give seven months of the year to the Southwest, and that's about the average. Count on it, you may generally reckon what to expect. When you don't have the excess for a year or two, you are drenched the year following.' He knew e
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   4016   4017   4018   4019   4020   4021   4022   4023   4024   4025   4026   4027   4028   4029   4030   4031   4032   4033   4034   4035   4036   4037   4038   4039   4040  
4041   4042   4043   4044   4045   4046   4047   4048   4049   4050   4051   4052   4053   4054   4055   4056   4057   4058   4059   4060   4061   4062   4063   4064   4065   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Arthur

 

publishing

 
discovered
 

opinions

 

published

 

excuse

 

meditating

 

safety

 

matter

 

talked


assist
 

present

 

instinct

 

observe

 
sanity
 
Harrow
 
Dunstane
 

circulation

 
private
 

School


nature
 

record

 

sphere

 

observations

 

casual

 

betrayer

 

accurately

 

shrugged

 
nonsense
 

printed


doubtful

 
discomposure
 

Southwest

 

months

 

average

 

Seasons

 

shuffle

 
calendars
 
generally
 

reckon


drenched
 

excess

 

expect

 

country

 

climate

 

enforces

 

position

 

junior

 

footlights

 

mouthing