Title: Mark Hurdlestone Or, The Two Brothers
Author: Susanna Moodie
Release Date: October 9, 2005 [EBook #16836]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** Start of this project gutenberg EBOOK mark Hurdlestone ***
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MARK HURDLESTONE:
Or,
The two brothers.
By Mrs. Moodie,
(Sister of Agnes Strickland.)
AUTHOR OF “ROUGHING IT IN THE BUSH,” “ENTHUSIASM,” ETC
The fire burns low, these
winter nights are cold;
I’d fain to bed, and
take my usual rest,
But duty cries, “There’s
work for thee to do;
Stir up the embers, fetch
another log,
To cheer the empty hearth.
This is the hour
When fancy calls to life her
busy train,
And thou must note the vision
ere it flies.”
* * * * *
Complete in one volume.
* * * * *
Third edition.
New York:
De Witt & Davenport, publishers,
162 Nassau street.
MARK HURDLESTONE;
Or,
The two brothers.
CHAPTER I.
Say, who art thou—thou
lean and haggard wretch!
Thou living satire on the
name of man!
Thou that hast made a god
of sordid gold,
And to thine idol offered
up thy soul?
Oh, how I pity thee thy wasted
years:
Age without comfort—youth
that had no prime.
To thy dull gaze the earth
was never green;
The face of nature wore no
cheering smile,
For ever groping, groping
in the dark;
Making the soulless object
of thy search
The grave of all enjoyment.—S.M.
Towards the close of the last century, there lived in the extensive parish of Ashton, in the county of ——, a hard-hearted, eccentric old man, called Mark Hurdlestone, the lord of the manor, the wealthy owner of Oak Hall and its wide demesne, the richest commoner in England, the celebrated miser.
Mark Hurdlestone was the wonder of the place; people were never tired of talking about him—of describing his strange appearance, his odd ways and penurious habits. He formed a lasting theme of conversation to the gossips of the village, with whom the great man at the Hall enjoyed no enviable notoriety. That Mark Hurdlestone was an object of curiosity, fear, and hatred, to his humble dependents, created no feeling of surprise in those who were acquainted with him, and had studied the repulsive features of his singular character.