Afoot in England by W. H. (William Henry) Hudson
page 58 of 280 (20%)
page 58 of 280 (20%)
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of black and blue eyes; blue versus black and black versus
blue, to put it both ways. And by black we mean black with orange-brown lights in it--the eye called tortoise-shell; and velvety browns with other browns, also hazels. Blue includes all blues, from ultramarine, or violet, to the palest blue of a pale sky; and all greys down to the grey that is almost white. Our preference for this or that colour is supposed to depend on nothing but individual taste, or fancy, and association. I believe it is something more, but I do find that we are very apt to be swayed this way and that by the colour of the eyes of the people we meet in life, according as they (the people) attract or repel us. The eyes of the two little girls were black as polished black diamonds until looked at closely, when they appeared a beautiful deep brown on which the black pupils were seen distinctly; they were so lovely that I, predisposed to prefer dark to light, felt that this question was now definitely settled for me--that black was best. That irresistible charm, the flame-like spirit which raised these two so much above the others--how could it go with anything but the darkest eyes! But no sooner was the question thus settled definitely and for all time, to my very great satisfaction, than it was unsettled again. I do not know how this came about; it may have been the sight of some small child's blue eyes looking up at me, like the arch blue eyes of a kitten, full of wonder at the world and everything in it; "Where did you get those eyes so blue?" "Out of the sky as I came through"; |
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