Thomas Brett Young, M.D.
WITH THE LOVE AND ADMIRATION
OF HIS SON
CONTENTS
BOOK I | ||
CHAPTER |
| PAGE |
I. | MURDERER’S CROSS | |
II. | GOLDEN MEDIOCRITY | |
III. | THE GREEN TREES | |
IV. | MIDSUMMER | |
V. | AIRS AND GRACES | |
VI. | THUNDER WEATHER | |
VII. | IMPURITY | |
VIII. | HOMEWARDS | |
IX. | THE DARK HOUSE | |
X. | THRENODY | |
XI. | THE THRESHOLD | |
XII. | THE HILLS | |
BOOK II. | ||
I. | THE CITY OF IRON | |
II. | MORTALITY BEHOLD | |
III. | CARNIVAL | |
SCIENCE | ||
V. | ROMANCE | |
VI. | THE DRESSER | |
VII. | THE CLERK | |
VIII. | LOWER SPARKDALE | |
IX. | EASY ROW | |
X. | WHITE ROSES | |
BOOK I
The green trees, when I saw them first through one of the gates, transported and ravished me; their sweetness and unusual beauty made my heart to leap and almost mad with ecstasy,—they were such strange and wonderful things. The skies were mine, and so were the sun and moon and stars,—and all the world was mine,—and I the only spectator and enjoyer of it.
Thomas Traherne.
CHAPTER I
MURDERER’S CROSS
I
Above and beyond the zone of villas, some still white with newly-mixed mortar and the latest unadorned by more than twelve-foot tendrils of ampelopsis or rambling roses, the downs bent their bow to the sky. The horizon loomed so smooth and vast that the plantations of pine and beech which fringed the summits were powerless to break the nobility and purpose of its contour, etched gray-black against the hem of a thunder-cloud that was of the colour of ink. Between the banks a chalk road climbed: an aspiring road, felted in the trodden parts with dust but cross-veined with flinty gutters through which rain poured, like London milk, in stormy weather. A smell of hot earth was in the air. The turf at the wayside was parched and slippery, so that Edwin Ingleby, plodding up the slope, was forced to keep to the white roadway by the slipperiness of his boot-leather. A rather pitiful figure he made, this small boy in an Eton jacket, his waistcoat now unbuttoned and his school cap crumpled in his hot hands. He walked and ran straight upward, as though the devil were at his heels; sometimes looking behind him to see if there were any one in pursuit, sometimes wiping the sweat from his forehead with the crumpled cap.