Book-bot.com - read famous books online for free

Uncle Silas - A Tale of Bartram-Haugh by Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu
page 344 of 641 (53%)
have recoiled from such an outrage with horror and indignation; and
instead, here he was, the apologist of that savage ruffian, Dickon Hawkes.

'And he is always so rude and impertinent to Milly and to me,' I continued.
'Oh! impertinent to you--that's another matter. I must see to that. Nothing
more, my dear child?'

'Well, there _was_ nothing more.'

'He's a useful servant, Hawkes; and though his looks are not prepossessing,
and his ways and language rough, yet he is a very kind father, and a most
honest man--a thoroughly moral man, though severe--a very rough diamond
though, and has no idea of the refinements of polite society. I venture to
say he honestly believes that he has been always unexceptionably polite to
you, so we must make allowances.'

And Uncle Silas smoothed my hair with his thin aged hand, and kissed my
forehead.

'Yes, we must make allowances; we must be kind. What says the Book?--"Judge
not, that ye be not judged." Your dear father acted upon that maxim--so
noble and so awful--and I strive to do so. Alas! dear Austin, _longo
intervalle_, far behind! and you are removed--my example and my help; you
are gone to your rest, and I remain beneath my burden, still marching on by
bleak and alpine paths, under the awful night.

O nuit, nuit douloureuse! O toi, tardive aurore!
Viens-tu? vas-tu venir? es-tu bien loin encore?

And repeating these lines of Chenier, with upturned eyes, and one hand
DigitalOcean Referral Badge