[Carnac’s Folly Complete by Gilbert Parker]@TWC D-Link bookCarnac’s Folly Complete CHAPTER II 6/42
He looked out of the window of the train, and there was only the long line of white country broken by the leafless trees and rail-fences and the mansard-roofs and low cottages with their stoops, built up with earth to keep them warm; and the sheds full of cattle; and here and there a sawmill going hard, and factories pounding away and men in fur coats driving the small Indian ponies; and the sharp calls of the men with the sleigh bringing wood, or meat, or vegetables to market.
He was by nature a queer compound of Radical and Conservative, a victim of vision and temperament.
He was full of pride, yet fuller of humility of a real kind.
As he left Montreal he thought of Junia Shale, and he recalled the day eleven years before when he had worn brass-toed boots, and he had caught Junia in his arms and kissed her, and Denzil had had his accident.
Denzil had got unreasonably old since then; but Junia remained as she was the joyous day when boyhood took on the first dreams of manhood. Life was a queer thing, and he had not yet got his bearings in it.
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