[Michael by E. F. Benson]@TWC D-Link bookMichael CHAPTER IV 39/47
"So that's settled.
It's really nice of you." The heat of the day was passing off, and over the sun-bleached plain the coolness of evening was beginning to steal.
Overhead the wind stirred more resonantly in the pines, and in the bushes birds called to each other.
Presently after, they rose from where they had lain all the afternoon and strolled along the needled slope to where, through a vista in the trees, they looked down on the lake and the hamlet that clustered near it.
Down the road that wound through the trees towards it passed labourers going homeward from their work, with cheerful guttural cries to each other and a herd of cows sauntered by with bells melodiously chiming, taking leisurely mouthfuls from the herbage of the wayside. In the village, lying low in the clear dusk, scattered lights began to appear, the smoke of evening fires to ascend, and the aromatic odour of the burning wood strayed towards them up the wind. Falbe, whose hand lay in the crook of Michael's arm, pointed downwards to the village that lay there sequestered and rural. "That's Germany," he said; "it's that which lies at the back of every German heart.
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