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The Story of Bessie Costrell by Mrs. Humphry Ward
page 44 of 93 (47%)

His countenance fell sadly. But he got the water, exclaiming when he saw
the wound.

He bathed it clumsily, then tied a bit of rag round it, and made her
head easy with the pillow. She did not speak, and he sat on beside her,
looking at her pale face, and torn, as the silent minutes passed,
between conflicting impulses. He had just passed an hour listening to a
good man's plain narrative of a life spent for Christ, amid
fever-swamps, and human beings more deadly still. The Vicar's friend was
a missionary bishop, and a High Churchman; Isaac, as a staunch Dissenter
by conviction and inheritance, thought ill both of bishops and
Ritualists. Nevertheless he had been touched; he had been fired. Deep,
though often perplexed instincts in his own heart had responded to the
spiritual passion of the speaker. The religious atmosphere had stolen
about him, melting and subduing.

And the first effect of it had been to quicken suddenly his domestic
conscience; to make him think painfully of Bessie and the children as he
climbed the hill.

Was his wife going the way of his son? And he, sitting day after day
like a dumb dog, instead of striving with her!

He made up his mind hurriedly.

'Bessie,' he said, stooping to her and speaking in a strange voice,
'Bessie, had yer been to Dawson's?'

Dawson was the landlord of the 'Spotted Deer.'
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