[She and I, Volume 1 by John Conroy Hutcheson]@TWC D-Link book
She and I, Volume 1

CHAPTER FIVE
3/16

Really, everybody appeared to be very civil and good natured to- day; and everything joyous and rose-coloured! Was it owing to the bright morning, or to the fact of its being Christmas, or to the sweet feelings I had lying hidden in my heart anent my darling?
I cannot tell: can you?
After a time Catch and I reached the river.

It was not now rolling by, a muddy, silent, whilom sluggish, whilom busy stream.

It was quite transformed in its appearance and resembled more some frozen arctic stream than the old Thames which I knew so well.

Far as the eye could reach, it was covered with sheets of broken ice, again congealed together and piled up with snow--so many little bergs, that had been born at Great Marlow and Hampton, and other spots above the locks; gradually increasing in size and bulk as they span round and swept by on the current, until they should reach the bridges below.

Then, they would, perhaps, be formed into one great icefield, stretching from bank to bank, whereon a grand bullock-roasting festival might be held, or a fancy fair instituted, as happened in the reign of James, the king, "of ever pious memory:" that is, if my chronology be right and my memory not at fault, as may very possibly be the case.
Doggy did not mind the ice a bit, however.


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