[The Woodlanders by Thomas Hardy]@TWC D-Link bookThe Woodlanders CHAPTER XLII 6/17
Yet who could be his listener, so mute and patient; for though he argued so rapidly and persistently, nobody replied. A dreadful enlightenment spread through the mind of Grace.
"Oh," she cried, in her anguish, as she hastily prepared herself to go out, "how selfishly correct I am always--too, too correct! Cruel propriety is killing the dearest heart that ever woman clasped to her own." While speaking thus to herself she had lit the lantern, and hastening out without further thought, took the direction whence the mutterings had proceeded.
The course was marked by a little path, which ended at a distance of about forty yards in a small erection of hurdles, not much larger than a shock of corn, such as were frequent in the woods and copses when the cutting season was going on.
It was too slight even to be called a hovel, and was not high enough to stand upright in; appearing, in short, to be erected for the temporary shelter of fuel. The side towards Grace was open, and turning the light upon the interior, she beheld what her prescient fear had pictured in snatches all the way thither. Upon the straw within, Winterborne lay in his clothes, just as she had seen him during the whole of her stay here, except that his hat was off, and his hair matted and wild. Both his clothes and the straw were saturated with rain.
His arms were flung over his head; his face was flushed to an unnatural crimson.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|