[Demos by George Gissing]@TWC D-Link book
Demos

CHAPTER VII
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All was grace and purity; the very folds towards the bottom of her dress hung in sculpturesque smoothness; the form of her half-seen foot bowed the herbage with lightest pressure.

From the boughs above there fell upon her a dancing network of shadow.
Hubert only half smiled; he stood with his hands joined behind him, his eyes fixed upon her face, waiting for her to turn But several moments passed and she was still intent on the landscape.

He spoke.
'Will you let me look ?' Her hands fell, all but dropping the glass; still, she did not start with unbecoming shrug as most people do, the instinctive movement of guarding against a stroke; the falling of her arms was the only abrupt motion, her head turning in the direction of the speaker with a grace as spontaneous as that we see in a fawn that glances back before flight.
'Oh, Mr.Eldon! How silently you have come!' The wild rose of her cheeks made rivalry for an instant with the richer garden blooms, and the subsiding warmth left a pearly translucency as of a lily petal against the light.
She held her hand to him, delicately gloved, warm; the whole of it was hidden within Hubert's clasp.
'What were you looking at so attentively ?' he asked.
'At Agworth station,' replied Adela, turning her eyes again in that quarter.

'My brother's train ought to be in by now, I think.

He comes home every Saturday.' 'Does he ?' Hubert spoke without thought, his look resting upon the maiden's red girdle.
'I am glad that you are well again,' Adela said with natural kindness.
'You have had a long illness.' 'Yes; it has been a tiresome affair.


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