[Red Pottage by Mary Cholmondeley]@TWC D-Link bookRed Pottage CHAPTER XXV 11/17
No recalling voice reached him.
Poets did not know what they were talking about.
With a trembling hand he slammed the gate and departed. Rachel remained a long time sitting on the wooden bench, so long that the stooping sun found out the solemn, outstretched arms of the cedar, and touched them till they gleamed green as a beetle's wing.
Each little twig and twiglet was made manifest, raw gold against the twilight that lurked beneath the heavy boughs. She sat so still that a squirrel came tiptoeing across the moss, and struck tail momentarily to observe her.
He looked critically at her, first with one round eye, and then, turning his sleek head, with the other, and decided that she was harmless. Presently a robin dropped down close to her, flashing up his gray under wing as he alighted, and then flew up into the cedar, and from its sun-stirred depths said his say. The robin never forgets.
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