[The Woodlanders by Thomas Hardy]@TWC D-Link book
The Woodlanders

CHAPTER XIII
11/17

A quarter of an hour passed, and all was blackness overhead.

Giles had not yet come down.
Then the tree seemed to shiver, then to heave a sigh; a movement was audible, and Winterborne dropped almost noiselessly to the ground.

He had thought the matter out, and having returned the ladder and billhook to their places, pursued his way homeward.

He would not allow this incident to affect his outer conduct any more than the danger to his leaseholds had done, and went to bed as usual.

Two simultaneous troubles do not always make a double trouble; and thus it came to pass that Giles's practical anxiety about his houses, which would have been enough to keep him awake half the night at any other time, was displaced and not reinforced by his sentimental trouble about Grace Melbury.


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