[Scenes of Clerical Life by George Eliot]@TWC D-Link bookScenes of Clerical Life CHAPTER 18 1/5
CHAPTER 18. At twelve o'clock, when all search and inquiry had been in vain, and the coroner was expected every moment, Mr.Gilfil could no longer defer the hard duty of revealing this fresh calamity to Sir Christopher, who must otherwise have it discovered to him abruptly. The Baronet was seated in his dressing-room, where the dark window-curtains were drawn so as to admit only a sombre light.
It was the first time Mr.Gilfil had had an interview with him this morning, and he was struck to see how a single day and night of grief had aged the fine old man.
The lines in his brow and about his mouth were deepened; his complexion looked dull and withered; there was a swollen ridge under his eyes; and the eyes themselves, which used to cast so keen a glance on the present, had the vacant expression which tells that vision is no longer a sense, but a memory. He held out his hand to Maynard, who pressed it, and sat down beside him in silence.
Sir Christopher's heart began to swell at this unspoken sympathy; the tears would rise, would roll in great drops down his cheeks.
The first tears he had shed since boyhood were for Anthony. Maynard felt as if his tongue were glued to the roof of his mouth.
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