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Chapter 10. Reading an Epitaph

Word Count: 2399    |    Released on: 17/11/2017

the cutter was running under a press of canvas that brought her gunwale to the water's ed

nt with cloaks and rugs. Cleve grew more and more interested as he adjusted the focus of his glass more exactly. On a sudden, from the little door in th

point, and then -"Yes," he thought, "the

nruthyn Priory is about six miles, and by the time the pursuing cutter was in motion the chas

either to visit the ruins, or for a walk in that wild and lonely park ca

ty little winding lane, the trees overhanging which look centuries old, stooping and mantled in ivy. They may have heard the tinkle of the bells of the prior's mule, as he ambled beneath their boughs, and the solemn swell of the monkish requiem from the melancholy little churchyard close by, under the old Priory windows.

leve, and climbed the gray rocky hillock that commands an

ursued the path up to the Pri

an active discussion with shrewish old Mrs. Hughes, who was very deaf, and often a little tipsy, and who was now tes

ughes his officer, he walked up to the visitor, and inquired very courteously the object of the application, and forthwith ordered th

region, the old lady, although she did not know to whom she was obliged, w

Margaret!" she called. The young lady turned, and Cleve saw before him once more in flesh

d for a moment her large eyes rested on Cleve with a g

that Booth Fanshawe had married a beautiful Italian, an heiress (a princess - wasn't she?)- at all events, a scion of one of their proud old houses, whose pedigrees run back into the Empire, and dwarf into parvenus the great personages of Debrett's Peerage. What made it worse was, that there was no shyness, no awkwardness. She talked a good deal to her companion, and laughed slightly once or twice, in a very sweet tone. The ol

bell-man of Cardyllian had been reading it from a handbill. He had never done anything so well in the House of Commons, and here it was accepted as a piece of commonplace. The worst of it was that there was no finesse in all this. It was in perfect good faith that this beautiful young lady was treating him like a footman. Cleve was in

with the accessible old lady, seeming, in a spirit, I dare say, alto

it to you. It is really very curious - a much older style than the res

eve, acting as porter, opened the ponderous door, and the party entered this dim and solemn Saxon chapel, and th

murmured the girl, as she looked round with a momentary awe and delight. It was

, to be sure, and that goes a long way; but its style is so rough and Cyclopean, that it overcomes one with a feeling of immense anti

were leading him into an oration. But he saw that the young lady looked at him, as

Miss Sheckleton - as I shall fo

odd carving about it, which has puzzled our a

nd ribbed arches, at some distance. The effect was singular. She was placed in the deep chiaroscuro, a strong gleam of light entering through a circular aperture in the side wall, illuminated her head and face with a vivid and isolated eff

too, and Miss Sheckleton observed perhaps some odd vagueness and iteration in his remarks;

ye, that she was now, for a moment, looking at him, believing herself unseen. If

lpably before us; there is nothing there, as amid the clatter and vulgarities of the town, to break our dreams. The beautiful rural stillness is monotony itself, and monotony is the spell and the condition of all mesmeric impressions. Hence young men, in part, are the dangers of those enchanted castles called country houses, in which you lose your heads and hearts; whither you a

ed in the aisle, "is the monument of old Martha Nokes; pray as

in the subdued tone suited to the sacr

woman, for I remember her quite well. I was eight years old when sh

and other virtues, and that "this stone was placed here in testimony of the sincere and merited esteem,

any cares and trials of wedded life, and willing also to remain to the end of her days in the service of the family of Verney, (to whom she was justly grateful,) and in which she had commenced her active and useful, though humble life, in the reign of King George the First.' So you see she spent all her life with us; and I'll tell our people, if you should h

her for a moment, and saw her look blank and even confounded. She averted her gaze, and som

funny old woman sh

an inkling of the cause. Cleve looked at the font, and lowered his large eyes to the epitaph of the Virgin Martha Nokes, and bit his lips, but he did la

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Contents

Volume 1. Chapter 1. Concerning Two Ladies who Sat in the Malory Pew Chapter 2. All that the Draper's Wife Could Tell Chapter 3. Home to Ware Chapter 4. On the Green of Cardyllian Chapter 5. A Visit to Hazelden Chapter 6. Malory by Moonlight Chapter 7. A View from the Refectory Window Chapter 8. A Night Sail Chapter 9. The Reverend Isaac Dixie Chapter 10. Reading an Epitaph Chapter 11. Farewell
Chapter 12. In which Cleve Verney Waylays an Old Lady
Chapter 13. The Boy with the Cage
Chapter 14. News About the Old Man of the Mountains
Chapter 15. Within the Sanctuary
Chapter 16. An Unlooked-For Visitor
Chapter 17. They Visit the Chapel of Penruthyn Again
Chapter 18. Cleve Again Before His Idol
Chapter 19. Cleve Verney Takes a Bold Step
Chapter 20. His Fate
Chapter 21. Captain Shrapnell
Chapter 22. Sir Booth Speaks
Chapter 23. Margaret has Her Warning
Chapter 24. Sir Booth in a Passion
Chapter 25. In which the Ladies Peep into Cardyllian
Volume 2. Chapter 1. In the Oak Parlour - A Meeting and Parting
Chapter 2. JudUs Apella
Chapter 3. Mr. Levi Visits Mrs. Mervyn
Chapter 4. Mr. Benjamin Levi Recognises an Acquaintance
Chapter 5. A Council of Three
Chapter 6. Mr. Dingwell Arrives
Chapter 7. Mr. Dingwell Makes Himself Comfortable
Chapter 8. The Lodger and His Landlady
Chapter 9. In which Mr. Dingwell Puts His Hand to the Poker
Chapter 10. Cleve Verney Sees the Chateau De Cresseron
Chapter 11. She Comes and Speaks
Chapter 12. Cleve Verney has a Visitor
Chapter 13. The Rev. Isaac Dixie Sets Forth on a Mission
Chapter 14. Over the Herring-Pond
Chapter 15. Mr. Cleve Verney Pays a Visit to Rosemary Court
Chapter 16. In Lord Verney's Library
Chapter 17. An Ovation
Chapter 18. Old Friends on the Green
Chapter 19. Vane Etherage Greets Lord Verney
Chapter 20. Rebecca Mervyn Reads Her Letter
Chapter 21. By Rail to London
Chapter 22. Lady Dorminster's Ball
Volume 3. Chapter 1. A Lark
Chapter 2. A New Voice
Chapter 3. Cleve Comes
Chapter 4. Love's Remorse
Chapter 5. Mrs. Mervyn's Dream
Chapter 6. Tom has a "Talk" With the Admiral
Chapter 7. Arcadian Red Brick, Lilac, and Laburnum
Chapter 8. The Triumvirate
Chapter 9. In Verney House
Chapter 10. A Thunder-Storm
Chapter 11. The Pale Horse
Chapter 12. In which His Friends Visit the Sick
Chapter 13. Mr. Dingwell Thinks of an Excursion
Chapter 14. A Surprise
Chapter 15. Clay Rectory by Moonlight
Chapter 16. An Alarm
Chapter 17. A New Light
Chapter 18. Mr. Dingwell and Mrs. Mervyn Converse
Chapter 19. The Greek Merchant Sees Lord Verney
Chapter 20. A Break-Down
Chapter 21. Mr. Larkin's Two Moves
Chapter 22. Conclusion
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