Home Again. George MacDonaldЧитать онлайн книгу.
tion>
George MacDonald
Home Again
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4064066245535
Table of Contents
CHAPTER III. A PENNYWORTH OF THINKING.
CHAPTER X. THE ROUND OF THE WORLD.
CHAPTER XIII. “HOME IS WHERE THE HEART IS.”
CHAPTER XIV. A MIDNIGHT REVIEW.
CHAPTER XVI. THE RIDE TOGETHER.
CHAPTER XVIII. A WINTER AFTERNOON.
CHAPTER XXII. THE SUMMER-HOUSE.
CHAPTER XXIV. THE DRAWING-ROOM.
CHAPTER XXV. A MIDNIGHT INTERVIEW.
CHAPTER XXVII. A FRUITLESS JOURNEY.
CHAPTER XXVIII. DOING AND DREAMING.
CHAPTER XXXI. THIS PICTURE AND THIS.
CHAPTER XXXII. THE LAST, BUT NOT THE END.
CHAPTER I. THE PARLOR.
In the dusk of the old-fashioned best room of a farm-house, in the faint glow of the buried sun through the sods of his July grave, sat two elderly persons, dimly visible, breathing the odor which roses unseen sent through the twilight and open window. One of the two was scarcely conscious of the odor, for she did not believe in roses; she believed mainly in mahogany, linen, and hams; to the other it brought too much sadness to be welcomed, for it seemed, like the sunlight, to issue from the grave of his vanished youth. He was not by nature a sad man; he was only one that had found the past more delightful than the present, and had not left his first loves.
The twilight of his years had crept upon him and was deepening; and he felt his youth slowly withering under their fallen leaves. With more education, and perhaps more receptivity than most farmers, he had married a woman he fervently loved, whose rarely truthful nature, to which she had striven to keep true, had developed the delicate flower of moral and social refinement; and her influence upon him had been of the eternal sort. While many of their neighbors were vying with each other in the effort to dress, and dwell, and live up to their notion of gentility, Richard Colman and his wife had never troubled themselves about fashion, but had sought to please each the taste of the other, and cultivate their own. Perhaps now as he sat thus silent in the dimmits, he was holding closer converse than he knew, or any of us can know, with one who seemed to have vanished from all this side of things, except the heart of her husband. That clung to what people would call her memory; I prefer to call it her.
The rose-scented hush was torn by the strident, cicala-like shrilling of a self-confident, self-satisfied female voice—
“Richard, that son of yours will come to no good! You may take my word for it!”
Mr. Colman made no answer; the dusky, sweet-smelling waves of the silence closed over its laceration.
“I am well aware my opinion is of no value in your eyes, Richard; but that does not absolve me from the duty of stating it: if you allow him to go on as he is doing now, Walter will never eat bread of his own earning!”
“There are many who do, and yet don’t come to much!” half thought, but nowise said the father.
“What do you mean to make of