[Scenes of Clerical Life by George Eliot]@TWC D-Link book
Scenes of Clerical Life

CHAPTER 13
14/15

Her hand is in her pocket, clenching the handle of the dagger, which she holds half out of its sheath.
She has reached the Rookery, and is under the gloom of the interlacing boughs.

Her heart throbs as if it would burst her bosom--as if every next leap must be its last.

Wait, wait, O heart!--till she has done this one deed.

He will be there--he will be before her in a moment.

He will come towards her with that false smile, thinking she does not know his baseness--she will plunge that dagger into his heart.
Poor child! poor child! she who used to cry to have the fish put back into the water--who never willingly killed the smallest living thing--dreams now, in the madness of her passion, that she can kill the man whose very voice unnerves her.
But what is that lying among the dank leaves on the path three yards before her?
Good God! it is he--lying motionless--his hat fallen off.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books