[A Strange Story<br> Complete by Edward Bulwer-Lytton]@TWC D-Link book
A Strange Story
Complete

CHAPTER VI
14/14

Mrs.Bruce, your own favourite set at vingt-un, with four new recruits.

Dr.Fenwick, you are like me, don't play cards, and don't care for music; sit here, and talk or not, as you please, while I knit." The other guests thus disposed of, some at the card-tables, some round the piano, I placed myself at Mrs.Poyntz's side, on a seat niched in the recess of a window which an evening unusually warm for the month of May permitted to be left open.

I was next to one who had known Lilian as a child, one from whom I had learned by what sweet name to call the image which my thoughts had already shrined.

How much that I still longed to know she could tell me! But in what form of question could I lead to the subject, yet not betray my absorbing interest in it?
Longing to speak, I felt as if stricken dumb; stealing an unquiet glance towards the face beside me, and deeply impressed with that truth which the Hill had long ago reverently acknowledged,--namely, that Mrs.Colonel Poyntz was a very superior woman, a very powerful creature.
And there she sat knitting, rapidly, firmly; a woman somewhat on the other side of forty, complexion a bronze paleness, hair a bronze brown, in strong ringlets cropped short behind,--handsome hair for a man; lips that, when closed, showed inflexible decision, when speaking, became supple and flexible with an easy humour and a vigilant finesse; eyes of a red hazel, quick but steady,--observing, piercing, dauntless eyes; altogether a fine countenance,--would have been a very fine countenance in a man; profile sharp, straight, clear-cut, with an expression, when in repose, like that of a sphinx; a frame robust, not corpulent; of middle height, but with an air and carriage that made her appear tall; peculiarly white firm hands, indicative of vigorous health, not a vein visible on the surface.
There she sat knitting, knitting, and I by her side, gazing now on herself, now on her work, with a vague idea that the threads in the skein of my own web of love or of life were passing quick through those noiseless fingers.

And, indeed, in every web of romance, the fondest, one of the Parcae is sure to be some matter-of-fact She, Social Destiny, as little akin to romance herself as was this worldly Queen of the Hill..


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