Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 10,116 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith.

Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 10,116 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith.
that young men occasionally design to burst from the circle of the passions, and think that they have done it, when indeed they are but making the circle more swiftly.  Here was Evan mouthing his farewell to Rose, using phrases so profoundly humble, that a listener would have taken them for bitter irony.  He said adieu to her,—­pronouncing it with a pathos to melt scornful princesses.  He tried to be honest, and was as much so as his disease permitted.

The black cloud had swallowed the sun; and turning off to the short cut across the downs, Evan soon rode between the wind and the storm.  He could see the heavy burden breasting the beacon-point, round which curled leaden arms, and a low internal growl saluted him advancing.  The horse laid back his ears.  A last gust from the opposing quarter shook the furzes and the clumps of long pale grass, and straight fell columns of rattling white rain, and in a minute he was closed in by a hissing ring.  Men thus pelted abandon without protest the hope of retaining a dry particle of clothing on their persons.  Completely drenched, the track lost, everything in dense gloom beyond the white enclosure that moved with him, Evan flung the reins to the horse, and curiously watched him footing on; for physical discomfort balanced his mental perturbation, and he who had just been chafing was now quite calm.

Was that a shepherd crouched under the thorn?  The place betokened a shepherd, but it really looked like a bundle of the opposite sex; and it proved to be a woman gathered up with her gown over her head.  Apparently, Mr. Evan Harrington was destined for these encounters.  The thunder rolled as he stopped by her side and called out to her.  She heard him, for she made a movement, but without sufficiently disengaging her head of its covering to show him a part of her face.

Bellowing against the thunder, Evan bade her throw back her garment, and stand and give him up her arms, that he might lift her on the horse behind him.

There came a muffled answer, on a big sob, as it seemed.  And as if heaven paused to hear, the storm was mute.

Could he have heard correctly?  The words he fancied he had heard sobbed were: 

‘Best bonnet.’

The elements hereupon crashed deep and long from end to end, like a table of Titans passing a jest.

Rain-drops, hard as hail, were spattering a pool on her head.  Evan stooped his shoulder, seized the soaked garment, and pulled it back, revealing the features of Polly Wheedle, and the splendid bonnet in ruins—­all limp and stained.

Polly blinked at him penitentially.

‘Oh, Mr. Harrington; oh, ain’t I punished!’ she whimpered.

In truth, the maid resembled a well-watered poppy.

Evan told her to stand up close to the horse, and Polly stood up close, looking like a creature that expected a whipping.  She was suffering, poor thing, from that abject sense of the lack of a circumference, which takes the pride out of women more than anything.  Note, that in all material fashions, as in all moral observances, women demand a circumference, and enlarge it more and more as civilization advances.  Respect the mighty instinct, however mysterious it seem.

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Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.