Foxglove Manor (Vol. 1-3). Robert Williams Buchanan
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Название: Foxglove Manor (Vol. 1-3)

Автор: Robert Williams Buchanan

Издательство: Bookwire

Жанр: Языкознание

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isbn: 4064066399702

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СКАЧАТЬ ection>

       Robert Williams Buchanan

      Foxglove Manor (Vol. 1-3)

      Complete Edition

      e-artnow, 2020

       Contact: [email protected]

      EAN 4064066399702

       Volume 1

       Volume 2

       Volume 3

      Volume 1

       Table of Contents

       PREFATORY NOTE.

       CHAPTER I. ST. CUTHBERT’S.

       CHAPTER II. AT THE VICARAGE.

       CHAPTER III. “THERE IS A CHANGE!”

       CHAPTER IV. GEORGE HALDANE.

       CHAPTER V. THE LAMB AND THE SHEPHERD.

       CHAPTER VI. THE UNKNOWN GOD.

       CHAPTER VII. CELESTIAL AFFINITIES.

       CHAPTER VIII. A SICK-CALL.

       CHAPTER IX. A SUMMER SHOWER.

       CHAPTER X. THE KISS.

       CHAPTER XI. EDITH.

       CHAPTER XII. CONSCIENCE.

       CHAPTER XIII. IN THE LABORATORY.

      PREFATORY NOTE.

       Table of Contents

      The following attempt at a tragedy in fiction (a tragedy, however, without a tragic ending) must not be construed into an attack on the English priesthood generally. I have simply pictured, in the Rev. Charles Santley, a type of man which exists, and of which I have had personal experience. Fortunately, such men are uncommon; still more fortunately, the clergymen of, the English Establishment are for the most part sane and healthy men, too unimaginative for morbid deviations.

      CHAPTER I. ST. CUTHBERT’S.

       Table of Contents

      As the sweet, clear voices of the surpliced choristers rose in the closing verse of the hymn, and the vicar, in his white robe and violet hood, ascended the pulpit steps, old Gabriel Ware, sexton and doorkeeper of St. Cuthbert’s, limped across the pavement and slipped into the porch, as his custom was at sermon-time on Sunday afternoons.

      He waited till the singing had ceased and the congregation had settled in their pews; and while he listened to the vicar announcing his text—“For in Him we live, and move, and have our being”—he fumbled in the pockets beneath his black gown of office, and then limped noiselessly out into the sunshine, where, after a glance round him, he pulled out a short clay pipe, well seasoned, filled it with twist, and began his usual after-dinner smoke.

      It was a hot, shimmering July afternoon, and it was much pleasanter to sit out of doors on a tombstone, listening to the vicars voice as it came though the dark lancets like a sound of running water.

      Half a mile or so away, nestled in trees, was the village of Omberley, with its glimpses of white walls and tiled or slated roofs. Then there were soft, hazy stretches of pasture, with idyllic groupings of cattle and sheep and trees. The fields of wheat and barley, turnips and potatoes, lay out idle and warm, growing and taking no care, and apparently causing none. The sight and smell of the land filled Gabriel with a stolid satisfaction at the order of nature and the providential gift of tobacco.

      There was but the faintest breeze stirring, and it wafted all manner of sweet odours and lulling whispers about the graveyard. Everywhere there was evidence of a fervent throbbing vitality and joyousness. The soft green turf which spread all round the church to the limits of the churchyard, here billowing over a nameless grave, here crusting with moss the base of a tombstone or a marble cross or a pillared urn, here edging round an oblong plot brilliant with flowers and hothouse plants—the very turf seemed stirred by glad impulses, and quivering with a crush of hurrying insect life. Daisies and buttercups and little blue and pink eyed flowers danced among the restless spears of grass with a merry hardihood. Laburnums and sycamores stood drowsing in the hot shining air, but they were not asleep, and were not silent, A persistent undertone came from among their shadowy boughs, as if the sap were buzzing through every leaf and stalk. Up their trunks, toiling through the rugged ravines of the rough bark, travelling along the branches, flitting from one cool leaf to another, myriads of nameless winged and creeping things went to and fro, and added their murmurs to the vast, vague resonance of life. A soft, ceaseless whispering was diffused from the tall green spires of a row of poplars which Went along the iron railing that separated the enclosure from the high-road. Blue and yellow butterflies fluttered from one ‘flowery grave to another; the big booming humble-bee went blundering among the blossoms; a grasshopper was: singing shrilly in the bushes near the railing; a laborious caravan of ants was crossing the stony wilderness of the gravel path; a dragon-fly hawked to and fro beneath the sycamores; small birds dropped twittering on cross or urn for an instant, flashed away up into a tree, and then darted off into the fields, as though too full of excitement and gamesomeness to rest more than a moment anywhere. Soft fleecy masses of luminous cloud slumbered in the hot blue sky overhead, and only in its remote deeps did there seem to be unimpassioned quietude and a sabbath stillness—only there and in the church.

      Notwithstanding СКАЧАТЬ