FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   4832   4833   4834   4835   4836   4837   4838   4839   4840   4841   4842   4843   4844   4845   4846   4847   4848   4849   4850   4851   4852   4853   4854   4855   4856  
4857   4858   4859   4860   4861   4862   4863   4864   4865   4866   4867   4868   4869   4870   4871   4872   4873   4874   4875   4876   4877   4878   4879   4880   4881   >>   >|  
re in the Pyrenees--married my daughter. She has an uncle, a hermit.' He became pale. 'I must do it. The rascal insults us all. Flings her off the day he married her! It 's a slap in the face to all of us. You are acquainted with the lady, sir. Would you call her a red-haired girl?' 'Red-gold of the ballads; chestnut-brown, with threads of fire.' 'She has the eyes for a man to swear by. I feel the loss of her, I can tell you. She was wine and no penalty to me. Is she much broken under it?--if I 'm to credit . . . I suppose I must. It floors me.' Admiral Baldwin's frosty stare returned on him. Gower caught an image of it, as comparable, without much straining, to an Arctic region smitten by the beams. 'Nothing breaks her courage,' he said. 'To be sure, my poor dear! Who could have guessed when she left my house she was on her way to a prizefight and a greengrocer's in Whitechapel. But the dog's not mad, though his bite 's bad; he 's an eccentric mongrel. He wants the whip; ought to have had it regularly from his first breeching. He shall whistle for her when he repents; and he will, mark me. This gout here will be having a snap at the vitals if I don't start to-night. Oblige me, half a minute.' The admiral stretched his hand for an arm to give support, stood, and dropped into the chair, signifying a fit of giddiness in the word 'Head.' Before the stupor had passed, Mrs. Carthew entered, anxious lest the admittance of a messenger of evil to her invalid should have been an error of judgement. The butler had argued it with her. She belonged to the list of persons appointed to cut life's thread when it strains, their general kindness being so liable to misdirection. Gower left the room and went into the garden. He had never seen a death; and the admiral's peculiar pallor intimated events proper to days of cold mist and a dripping stillness. How we go, was the question among his problems:--if we are to go! his youthful frame insistingly added. The fog down a wet laurel-walk contracted his mind with the chilling of his blood, and he felt that he would have to see the thing if he was to believe in it. Of course he believed, but life throbbed rebelliously, and a picture of a desk near a lively fire-grate, books and pen and paper, and a piece of writing to be approved of by the Hesper of ladies, held ground with a pathetic heroism against the inevitable. He got his wits to the front by walking faster; and then t
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   4832   4833   4834   4835   4836   4837   4838   4839   4840   4841   4842   4843   4844   4845   4846   4847   4848   4849   4850   4851   4852   4853   4854   4855   4856  
4857   4858   4859   4860   4861   4862   4863   4864   4865   4866   4867   4868   4869   4870   4871   4872   4873   4874   4875   4876   4877   4878   4879   4880   4881   >>   >|  



Top keywords:
admiral
 

married

 

strains

 
thread
 

pallor

 
garden
 

peculiar

 

kindness

 

liable

 

misdirection


general

 
Before
 

stupor

 

passed

 

Carthew

 

giddiness

 
support
 

dropped

 

signifying

 

entered


anxious

 

butler

 

judgement

 

argued

 

belonged

 

persons

 

admittance

 

messenger

 

intimated

 
invalid

appointed

 

writing

 

lively

 

believed

 

throbbed

 
rebelliously
 

picture

 

approved

 

Hesper

 

walking


faster

 

inevitable

 

ladies

 
ground
 

pathetic

 

heroism

 

problems

 

youthful

 
insistingly
 

question