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The Man Whom the Trees Loved by Algernon Blackwood
page 87 of 93 (93%)
"My dear, it is the cold of the early morning hours. The whole world
sleeps. Now sleep again yourself."

He whispered close to her ear. She felt his hand stroking her. His voice
was soft and very soothing. But only a part of him was there; only a
part of him was speaking; it was a half-emptied body that lay beside her
and uttered these strange sentences, even forcing her own singular
choice of words. The horrible, dim enchantment of the trees was close
about them in the room--gnarled, ancient, lonely trees of winter,
whispering round the human life they loved.

"And let me sleep again," she heard him murmur as he settled down among
the clothes, "sleep back into that deep, delicious peace from which you
called me."

His dreamy, happy tone, and that look of youth and joy she discerned
upon his features even in the filtered moonlight, touched her again as
with the spell of those shining, mild green presences. It sank down into
her. She felt sleep grope for her. On the threshold of slumber one of
those strange vagrant voices that loss of consciousness lets loose cried
faintly in her heart--

"There is joy in the Forest over one sinner that--"

Then sleep took her before she had time to realize even that she was
vilely parodying one of her most precious texts, and that the
irreverence was ghastly.

And though she quickly slept again, her sleep was not as usual,
dreamless. It was not woods and trees she dreamed of, but a small and
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