One of Our Conquerors — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 104 pages of information about One of Our Conquerors — Volume 2.

One of Our Conquerors — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 104 pages of information about One of Our Conquerors — Volume 2.
his face shone in talking.  He was at home with the girl’s eyes, as he had never been.  A song expressing in one of the combative and devotional, went to the springs of his blood; for he was of an old warrior race, beneath the thick crust of imposed peaceful maxims and commercial pursuits and habitual stiff correctness.  As much as wine, will music bring out the native bent of the civilized man:  endow him with language too.  He was as if unlocked; he met Nesta’s eyes and ran in a voluble interchange, that gave him flattering after-thoughts; and at the moment sensibly a new and assured, or to some extent assured, station beside a girl so vivid; by which the young lady would be helped to perceive his unvoiced solider gifts.

Nataly observed them, thinking of Victor’s mastering subtlety.  She had hoped (having clearly seen the sheep’s eye in the shepherd) that Mr. Barmby would be watchful to act as a block between them; and therefore she had stipulated for his presence on the journey.  She remembered Victor’s rapid look of readiness to consent:—­he reckoned how naturally Mr. Barmby would serve as a foil to any younger man.  Mr. Barmby had tried all along to perform his part:  he had always been thwarted; notably once at Gisors, where by some cunning management he and mademoiselle found themselves in the cell of the prisoner’s Nail-wrought work while Nesta had to take Sowerby’s hand for help at a passage here and there along the narrow outer castle-walls.  And Mr. Barmby, upon occasions, had set that dimple in Nesta’s cheek quivering, though Simeon Fenellan was not at hand, and there was no telling how it was done, beyond the evidence that Victor willed it so.

From the day of the announcement of Lakelands, she had been brought more into contact with his genius of dexterity and foresight than ever previously:  she had bent to the burden of it more; had seen herself and everybody else outstripped—­herself, of course; she did not count in a struggle with him.  But since that red dawn of Lakelands, it was almost as if he had descended to earth from the skies.  She now saw his mortality in the miraculous things he did.  The reason of it was, that through the perceptible various arts and shifts on her level, an opposing spirit had plainer view of his aim, to judge it.  She thought it a mean one.

The power it had to hurry her with the strength of a torrent to an end she dreaded, impressed her physically; so far subduing her mind, in consequence, as to keep the idea of absolute resistance obscure, though her bosom heaved with the breath; but what was her own of a mind hung hovering above him, criticizing; and involuntarily, discomfortingly.  She could have prayed to be led blindly or blindly dashed on:  she could trust him for success; and her critical mind seemed at times a treachery.  Still she was compelled to judge.

When he said to her at night, pressing both her hands:  ’This is the news of the day, my love!  It’s death at last.  We shall soon be thanking heaven for freedom’; her fingers writhed upon his and gripped them in a torture of remorse on his behalf.  A shattering throb of her heart gave her sight of herself as well.  For so it is with the woman who loves in subjection, she may be a critic of the man, she is his accomplice.’

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One of Our Conquerors — Volume 2 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.