The Survivor by E. Phillips (Edward Phillips) Oppenheim
page 14 of 272 (05%)
page 14 of 272 (05%)
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"No word from him, nor any hint of such a thing has ever made me think
of Joan in such a connection. I should have been less surprised if the ceiling had fallen in upon us." She looked at him and nodded gravely. "Well," she said, "our oracle has spoken. What are you going to do?" "I am going to ask for your advice first," he said. "Then you must tell me just how you feel," she said. He drew a long breath. "There are so many things," he said, speaking softly and half to himself. "Last week, Cicely, I took a compass and a stick and I walked across the hills to Rydal Mount, where Wordsworth lived. When I came back I think that I was quite content to spend all my days here. It is such a beautiful world. Some day when you have lived here longer, you will know what I mean--the bondage will fall upon you, too. The mountains with their tops hidden in soft blue mist, the winds blowing across the waste places, the wild flowers springing up in unexpected corners, the little streams tearing down the hillside to flow smoothly like a belt of beautiful ribbon through the pasture land below. The love which comes for these things, Cicely, is a strange, haunting thing. You cannot escape from it. It is a sort of bondage. The winds seem to tune themselves to your thoughts, the sunlight laughs away your depression. Listen! Do you hear the sheep-bells from behind the hill there? Isn't that music? Then the twilight and the darkness! If you are on the hilltop they seem to steal down like a world of soothing |
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