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The Astonishing History of Troy Town by Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
page 38 of 323 (11%)
with their roots the grey garden wall and sprawled down to the beach
below--the stained and yellow frontage looked down towards the busy
harbour, as it seemed with a sense of serene decay, haunted but
without disquietude, like the face of an old lady who has memories
and lives in them, though she deigns to contemplate a life from which
her hopes, with her old friends and lovers, have dropped out.
Perhaps Mr. Fogo had some sympathy with this mood; for Caleb, after
waiting some time for his reply, took to his paddles again with a
will, and presently the boat, sweeping round a projecting rock,
passed into a very different scene.

Here the river, shut in on the one side with budding trees to the
water's edge, on the other with bracken and patches of ploughed land
to where the cliffs broke sheer away, stretched for some miles
without bend or break. Far ahead a blue bank of woodland closed the
view. Not a sound disturbed the stillness, not a sail broke the
placid expanse of water.

But a true Trojan must still be talking. Presently Caleb resumed.

"'Tes a luvly spot, as you said, sir. Mr. Moggridge down at the
customs--he's a poet, as maybe you know--has written a mint o' verses
about this 'ere place. 'Natur', he says:--"

"Natur' has 'ere assoomed her softest garb;
'Ere would I live an' die

"--which I calls a very touchin' sentiment, an' like what they says
in a nigger song."

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