[None Other Gods by Robert Hugh Benson]@TWC D-Link book
None Other Gods

CHAPTER III
2/41

The grounds were abominably neglected when I saw them; grass was growing on every path, and as fine a crop of weeds surged up amongst the old autumn flowers as ever I have seen.

The house, too, was a sad sight.

There here two big rooms, one on either side of the little entrance-hall--one a dining-room, the other a sort of drawing-room--and both were dreary and neglected-looking places.

In the one the doctor occasionally ate, in the other he never sat except when a rare visitor came to see him, and the little room supposed to be a study at the foot of the stairs in the inner hall that led through the kitchen was hardly any better.

I was there, I say, last autumn, and the condition of the place must have been very much the same as that in which it was when Frank came to Tarfield in October.
For the fact was that the doctor--who was possessed of decent private means--devoted the whole of his fortune, the whole of his attention, and the whole of his life--such as it was--to the study of toxins upstairs.
Toxins, I understand, have something to do with germs.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books