[Phantastes by George MacDonald]@TWC D-Link bookPhantastes CHAPTER XXIII 27/32
I was certain it was the really grand accompaniments that overcame him; that the stars overhead, the dark towering tops of the yew-trees, and the wind that, like an unseen spirit, sighed through their branches, bowed his spirit to the belief, that in all these ceremonies lay some great mystical meaning which, his humility told him, his ignorance prevented him from understanding. More convinced than before, that there was evil here, I could not endure that my master should be deceived; that one like him, so pure and noble, should respect what, if my suspicions were true, was worse than the ordinary deceptions of priestcraft.
I could not tell how far he might be led to countenance, and otherwise support their doings, before he should find cause to repent bitterly of his error.
I watched the new procession yet more keenly, if possible, than the former.
This time, the central figure was a girl; and, at the close, I observed, yet more indubitably, the shrinking back, and the crowding push.
What happened to the victims, I never learned; but I had learned enough, and I could bear it no longer.
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