[Bleak House by Charles Dickens]@TWC D-Link book
Bleak House

CHAPTER XII
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It glides over the park after the moving shadows of the clouds, and chases them, and never catches them, all day.

It looks in at the windows and touches the ancestral portraits with bars and patches of brightness never contemplated by the painters.

Athwart the picture of my Lady, over the great chimney-piece, it throws a broad bend-sinister of light that strikes down crookedly into the hearth and seems to rend it.
Through the same cold sunshine and the same sharp wind, my Lady and Sir Leicester, in their travelling chariot (my Lady's woman and Sir Leicester's man affectionate in the rumble), start for home.

With a considerable amount of jingling and whip-cracking, and many plunging demonstrations on the part of two bare-backed horses and two centaurs with glazed hats, jack-boots, and flowing manes and tails, they rattle out of the yard of the Hotel Bristol in the Place Vendome and canter between the sun-and-shadow-chequered colonnade of the Rue de Rivoli and the garden of the ill-fated palace of a headless king and queen, off by the Place of Concord, and the Elysian Fields, and the Gate of the Star, out of Paris.
Sooth to say, they cannot go away too fast, for even here my Lady Dedlock has been bored to death.

Concert, assembly, opera, theatre, drive, nothing is new to my Lady under the worn-out heavens.


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