[Micah Clarke by Arthur Conan Doyle]@TWC D-Link bookMicah Clarke CHAPTER I 15/18
Had I said that he was fierce in ins religion and subject to strange fits of piety, the words might have made little impression upon you; but when I tell you of his attack upon the officers in the tanning-yard, and his summoning us down in the dead of the night to await the second coming, you can judge for yourselves the lengths to which his belief would carry him.
For the rest, he was an excellent man of business, fair and even generous in his dealings, respected by all and loved by few, for his nature was too self-contained to admit of much affection.
To us he was a stern and rigid father, punishing us heavily for whatever he regarded as amiss in our conduct.
He bad a store of such proverbs as 'Give a child its will and a whelp its fill, and neither will strive,' or 'Children are certain cares and uncertain comforts,' wherewith he would temper my mother's more kindly impulses.
He could not bear that we should play trick-track upon the green, or dance with the other children upon the Saturday night. As to my mother, dear soul, it was her calm, peaceful influence which kept my father within bounds, and softened his austere rule.
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