[The Freelands by John Galsworthy]@TWC D-Link book
The Freelands

CHAPTER VIII
16/25

He shook his head and muttered through that straggly moustache: "You're a niece, aren't you?
I know your father.

He's a big man." Hearing those words spoken of her father, Nedda flushed.
"Yes, he is," she said fervently.
Her new acquaintance went on: "He's got the gift of truth--can laugh at himself as well as others; that's what makes him precious.

These humming-birds here to-night couldn't raise a smile at their own tomfoolery to save their silly souls." He spoke still in that voice of smothery wrath, and Nedda thought: 'He IS nice!' "They've been talking about 'the Land'"-- he raised his hands and ran them through his palish hair--"'the Land!' Heavenly Father! 'The Land!' Why! Look at that fellow!" Nedda looked and saw a man, like Richard Coeur de Lion in the history books, with a straw-colored moustache just going gray.
"Sir Gerald Malloring--hope he's not a friend of yours! Divine right of landowners to lead 'the Land' by the nose! And our friend Britto!" Nedda, following his eyes, saw a robust, quick-eyed man with a suave insolence in his dark, clean-shaved face.
"Because at heart he's just a supercilious ruffian, too cold-blooded to feel, he'll demonstrate that it's no use to feel--waste of valuable time--ha! valuable!--to act in any direction.

And that's a man they believe things of.

And poor Henry Wiltram, with his pathetic: 'Grow our own food--maximum use of the land as food-producer, and let the rest take care of itself!' As if we weren't all long past that feeble individualism; as if in these days of world markets the land didn't stand or fall in this country as a breeding-ground of health and stamina and nothing else.


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