DENZIL QUARRIER

by

GEORGE GISSING

[CHAPTER I] [CHAPTER II] [CHAPTER III] [CHAPTER IV] [CHAPTER V]
[CHAPTER VI] [CHAPTER VII] [CHAPTER VIII] [CHAPTER IX] [CHAPTER X]
[CHAPTER XI] [CHAPTER XII] [CHAPTER XIII] [CHAPTER XIV] [CHAPTER XV]
[CHAPTER XVI] [CHAPTER XVII] [CHAPTER XVIII] [CHAPTER XIX] [CHAPTER XX]
[CHAPTER XXI] [CHAPTER XXII] [CHAPTER XXIII] [CHAPTER XXIV] [CHAPTER XXV]
[CHAPTER XXVI] [CHAPTER XXVII]

CHAPTER I

For half an hour there had been perfect silence in the room. The cat upon the hearthrug slept profoundly; the fire was sunk to a still red glow; the cold light of the autumn afternoon thickened into dusk.

Lilian seemed to be reading. She sat on a footstool, her arm resting on the seat of a basket-chair, which supported a large open volume. But her hand was never raised to turn a page, and it was long since her eyes had gathered the sense of the lines on which they were fixed. This attitude had been a favourite one with her in childhood, and nowadays, in her long hours of solitude, she often fell into the old habit. It was a way of inviting reverie, which was a way of passing the time.

She stirred at length; glanced at the windows, at the fire, and rose.

A pleasant little sitting-room, furnished in the taste of our time; with harmonies and contrasts of subdued colour, with pictures intelligently chosen, with store of graceful knick-knacks. Lilian's person was in keeping with such a background; her dark gold hair, her pale, pensive, youthful features, her slight figure in its loose raiment, could not have been more suitably displayed. In a room of statelier proportions she would have looked too frail, too young for significance; out of doors she was seldom seen to advantage; here one recognized her as the presiding spirit in a home fragrant of womanhood. The face, at this moment, was a sad one, but its lines expressed no weak surrender to dolefulness; her lips were courageous, and her eyes such as brighten readily with joy.