[Stella Fregelius by H. Rider Haggard]@TWC D-Link book
Stella Fregelius

CHAPTER II
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In appearance he was handsome also; in fact, much better looking than his son, with his iron-grey hair, his clear-cut features, somewhat marred in effect by a certain shiftiness of the mouth, and his large dark eyes.
Morris had those dark eyes also--they redeemed his face from plainness, for otherwise it showed no beauty, the features being too irregular, the brow too prominent, and the mouth too large.

Yet it could boast what, in the case of a man at any rate, is better than beauty--spirituality, and a certain sympathetic charm.

It was not the face which was so attractive, but rather the intelligence, the personality that shone through it, as the light shines through the horn panes of some homely, massive lantern.

Speculative eyes of the sort that seem to search horizons and gather knowledge there, but shrink from the faces of women; a head of brown hair, short cut but untidy, an athletic, manlike form to which, bizarrely enough, a slight stoop, the stoop of a student, seemed to give distinction, and hands slender and shapely as those of an Eastern--such were the characteristics of Morris Monk, or at least those of them that the observer was apt to notice.
"Hullo! Morris, are you star-gazing there ?" said Colonel Monk, with a yawn.

"I suppose that I must have fallen asleep after dinner--that comes of stopping too long at once in the country and drinking port.


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