[Peter’s Mother by Mrs. Henry De La Pasture]@TWC D-Link bookPeter’s Mother CHAPTER VIII 3/20
His clear eyes, his bright, yet steady glance, inspired confidence. The doctor might have been taken for a poet, but John looked like a philosopher. He was also, as obviously, in appearance, a man of the world, and a Londoner, as the doctor was evidently a countryman, and a hermit.
His advantages over the doctor included his voice, which was as deep and musical as the tones of his companion were harsh. The manner, no less than the matter of John's speech, had early brought him distinction. Nature, rather than cultivation, had bestowed on him the faculty of conveying the impression he wished to convey, in tones that charm; and held his auditors, and penetrated ears dulled and fatigued by monotony and indistinctness. The more impassioned his pleading, the more utterly he held his own emotion in check; the more biting his subtly chosen words, the more courteous his manner; now deadly earnest, now humorously scornful, now graciously argumentative, but always skilfully and designedly convincing. The doctor, save in the presence of a patient, had no such control over himself as John Crewys carried from the law-courts, into his life of every day. "Why don't you," he said, in fiery tones, "let in air and life, and a view of the outside world, and as much sunshine as possible into this musty old house? You have the power, if you had only the will." "You speak figuratively, I notice," said John.
"I should be much obliged if you would tell me exactly what you mean." He would have answered in warmer and more kindly tones had Sarah's words not rung upon his ear. Was the doctor going to fight Lady Mary's battles now, and with him, of all people in the world? As though there were any one in the world to whom her interests could be dearer than-- John stopped short in his thoughts, and looked attentively at the doctor.
His heart smote him.
How pallid was that tired face; and the hollow eyes, how sad and tired too! The doctor had been up all night, in a wretched isolated cottage, watching a man die--but John did not know that. He perceived that this was no meddler, but a man speaking of something very near his heart; no presuming and interfering outsider who deserved a snub, but a man suffering from some deep and hidden cause. The doctor's secret was known to John long before he had finished what he had to say; but he listened attentively, and gave no sign that this was so. "She will die," said Blundell, "if this goes on;" and he neither mentioned any name, nor did John Crewys require him to do so. The doctor's words came hurrying out incoherently from the depths of his anxiety and earnestness. "She will die if this goes on.
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