[Guy Rivers: A Tale of Georgia by William Gilmore Simms]@TWC D-Link book
Guy Rivers: A Tale of Georgia

CHAPTER XI
20/21

He was followed by Rivers, who had been sitting beside him.
The interruption silenced everything like prayer; there was no further attention for the preacher; and accordingly a most admired disorder overspread the audience.

One after another rose and left the area, and those not the first to withdraw followed in rapid succession; until, under the influence of that wild stimulant, curiosity, the preacher soon found himself utterly unattended, except by the female portion of his auditory.

These, too, or rather the main body of them at least, were now only present in a purely physical sense; for, with the true characteristic of the sex, their minds were busily employed in the wilderness of reflection which this movement among the men had necessarily inspired.
Ralph Colleton, however, with praiseworthy decorum, lingered to the last--his companion Forrester, under the influence of a whisper from one over his shoulder, having been among the first to retire.

He, too, could not in the end avoid the general disposition, and at length took his way to the animated and earnest knot which he saw assembled in the shade of the adjoining thicket, busied in the discussion of some concern of more than common interest.

In his departure from the one gathering to the other, he caught a glance from the eye of Lucy Munro, which had in it so much of warning, mingled at the same time with an expression of so much interest, that he half stopped in his progress, and, but for the seeming indecision and awkwardness of such a proceeding, would have returned--the more particularly, indeed, when, encountering her gaze with a corresponding fixedness--though her cheek grew to crimson with the blush that overspread it--her glance was not yet withdrawn.


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