Mrs. Falchion, Volume 2. by Gilbert Parker
page 29 of 165 (17%)
page 29 of 165 (17%)
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in her: one pitiless as of old; the other human, anxious, not unlovely.
At length we became silent, and walked so side by side for a time. Then, with that old delightful egotism and selfishness--delightful in its very daring--she said: "Well, amuse me!" "And is it still the end of your existence," I rejoined--"to be amused?" "What is there else to do?" she replied with raillery. "Much. To amuse others, for instance; to regard human beings as something more than automata." "Has Mr. Roscoe made you a preaching curate? I helped Amshar at the Tanks." "One does not forget that. Yet you pushed Amshar with your foot." "Did you expect me to kiss the black coward? Then, I nursed Mr. Roscoe in his illness." "And before that?" "And before that I was born into the world, and grew to years of knowledge, and learned what fools we mortals be, and--and there--is that Mr. Devlin's big sawmill?" We had suddenly emerged on a shelf of the mountainside, and were looking down into the Long Cloud Valley. It was a noble sight. Far to the north were foothills covered with the glorious Norfolk pine, rising in steppes |
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