[Warlock o’ Glenwarlock by George MacDonald]@TWC D-Link book
Warlock o’ Glenwarlock

CHAPTER XVI
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The sight of the bottle before the fire, however, did much to enable him, not to be patient, but to suppress the shows of impatience.

He eyed it, and loved it, and held his peace.

He saw the water at his elbow, and hated it the worse that it was within his reach--hated its cold staring rebuke as he hated virtue--hated it as if its well were in the churchyard where the old captain was buried sixty years ago.
-- Confound him! why wouldn't he lie still?
He made some effort to be polite to the old hag, as he called her, in that not very secret chamber of his soul, whose door was but too ready to fall ajar, and allow its evil things to issue.

He searched his lumber-room for old stories to tell, but found it difficult to lay hold on any fit for the ears present, though one of the ladies was an old woman--old enough, he judged, not to be startled at anything, and the other his own daughter, who ought to see no harm when her father made the company laugh! It was a miserable time for him, but, like a much enduring magician awaiting the moment of power, he kept eying the bottle, and gathering comfort.
Grizzie eyed him from behind, almost as he eyed the bottle.

She eyed him as she might the devil caught in the toils of the arch-angel; and if she did not bring against him a railing accusation, it was more from cunning than politeness.


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