[The Woodlanders by Thomas Hardy]@TWC D-Link bookThe Woodlanders CHAPTER XVI 4/12
He jumped up and looked for his hat, but was unable to find the right one; glancing again out of the window he saw that he was too late.
Having come up, she stopped, looked at the gate, picked up a little stick, and using it as a bayonet, pushed open the obstacle without touching it at all. He steadily watched her till she had passed out of sight, recognizing her as the very young lady whom he had seen once before and been unable to identify.
Whose could that emotional face be? All the others he had seen in Hintock as yet oppressed him with their crude rusticity; the contrast offered by this suggested that she hailed from elsewhere. Precisely these thoughts had occurred to him at the first time of seeing her; but he now went a little further with them, and considered that as there had been no carriage seen or heard lately in that spot she could not have come a very long distance.
She must be somebody staying at Hintock House? Possibly Mrs.Charmond, of whom he had heard so much--at any rate an inmate, and this probability was sufficient to set a mild radiance in the surgeon's somewhat dull sky. Fitzpiers sat down to the book he had been perusing.
It happened to be that of a German metaphysician, for the doctor was not a practical man, except by fits, and much preferred the ideal world to the real, and the discovery of principles to their application.
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