The Minister's Charge by William Dean Howells
page 31 of 438 (07%)
page 31 of 438 (07%)
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with you."
"Oh, not at all, not at all. I guess I don't want to see any publisher this afternoon. Well, good afternoon!" He turned away from Sewell's remorseful pursuit, and clumsily hurrying down the steps, he walked up the street and round the next corner. Sewell stood watching him in rueful perplexity, shading his eyes from the mild October sun with his hand; and some moments after Barker had disappeared, he remained looking after him. When he rejoined the ladies in the dining-room they fell into a conscious silence. "Have you been telling, Lucy?" he asked. "Yes, I've been telling, David. It was the only way. Did you offer to go with him to a publisher again?" "Yes, I did. It was the only way," said Sewell. Miss Vane and his wife both broke into a cry of laughter. The former got her breath first. "So _that_ was the origin of the famous sermon that turned all our heads grey with good resolutions." Sewell assented with a sickly grin. "What in the world _made_ you encourage him?" "My goodness of heart, which I didn't take the precaution of mixing with goodness of head before I used it." Everything was food for Miss Vane's laugh, even this confession. |
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