Nocturne by Frank Swinnerton
page 63 of 195 (32%)
page 63 of 195 (32%)
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brighter and brighter, as the stars appear to do when the darkness
deepens. "See," he proceeded. "Did Alf say there was any noos?" He admitted an uncertainty. Furtively he looked at her, suspecting all the time that memory had betrayed him; but in his ancient way continuing to trust to Magic. "Well, you didn't seem to think much of what he _did_ bring. But I'll tell you a bit of news, Pa. And that is, that you've got a pair of the rummiest daughters I ever struck!" Pa looked out from beneath his bushy grey eyebrows, resembling a worn and dilapidated perversion of Whistler's portrait of Carlyle. His eyelids seemed to work as he brooded upon her announcement. It was as though, together, these two explored the Blanchard archives for confirmation of Jenny's sweeping statement. The Blanchards of several generations might have been imagined as flitting across a fantastic horizon, keening for their withered laurels, thrown into the shades by these more brighter eccentrics. It was, or it might have been, a fascinating speculation. But Pa did not indulge this antique vein for very long. The moment and its concrete images beguiled him back to the daughter before him and the daughter who was engaged in an unexpected emotional treat. He said: "I know," and gave a wide grin that showed the gaps in his teeth as nothing else could have done--not even the profoundest yawn. Jenny was stunned by this evidence of brightness in her parent. "Well, you're a caution!" she cried. "And to think of you sitting there |
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