The Mating of Lydia by Mrs. Humphry Ward
page 94 of 510 (18%)
page 94 of 510 (18%)
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corner of the grass-grown drive, diverted his thoughts.
The doctor--the arch-villain of the plot! Melrose bethought himself a moment. Then he went along the corridor to his library, half expecting to see some other invader ensconced in his own chair. He rang the bell and Dixon hurriedly appeared. "Show Doctor Undershaw in here." And standing on the rug, every muscle in his tall and still vigorous frame tightening in expectation of the foe, he looked frowning round the chaos of his room. Pictures, with or without frames, and frames without pictures; books in packing-cases with hinged sides, standing piled one upon another, some closed and some with the sides open and showing the books within; portfolios of engravings and drawings; inlaid or ivory boxes, containing a medley of objects--miniatures, snuff-boxes, buttons, combs, seals; vases and plates of blue and white Nankin; an Italian stucco or two; a Renaissance bust in painted wood; fragments of stuff, cabinets, chairs, and tables of various dates and styles--all were gathered together in one vast and ugly confusion. It might have been a _salone_ in one of the big curiosity shops of Rome or Venice, where the wrecks and sports of centuries are heaped into the _piano nobile_ of some great building, once a palazzo, now a chain of lumber rooms. For here also, the large and stately library, with its nobly designed bookcases--still empty of books--its classical panelling, and embossed ceiling, made a setting of which the miscellaneous plunder within it was not worthy. A man of taste would have conceived the beautiful room itself as suffering from the disorderly uses to which it was put. |
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