The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 351 pages of information about The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come.

The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 351 pages of information about The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come.
raiment, too, was a Solomon’s—­for him.  He had protested, but in vain; and he, too, wore white trousers with straps, high-heeled boots, and a wine-colored waistcoat and slouch hat, and a brave, though very conscious, figure he made, with his tall body, well-poised head, strong shoulders and thick hair.  It was a rare thing for Miss Lucy to do, but the old gentlewoman could not resist the Major, and she, too, rode in state with them, smiling indulgently at the Major’s quips, and now, kindly, on Chad.  A drowsy peace lay over the magnificent woodlands, unravaged then except for firewood; the seared pastures, just beginning to show green again for the second spring; the flashing creek, the seas of still hemp and yellow corn, and Chad saw a wistful shadow cross Miss Lucy’s pale face, and a darker one anxiously sweep over the Major’s jesting lips.

Guests were arriving, when they entered the yard gate, and guests were coming behind them.  General and Mrs. Dean were receiving them on the porch, and Harry and Dan were helping the ladies out of their carriages, while, leaning against one of the columns, in pure white, was the graceful figure of Margaret.  That there could ever have been any feeling in any member of the family other than simple, gracious kindliness toward him, Chad could neither see nor feel.  At once every trace of embarrassment in him was gone, and he could but wonder at the swift justice done him in a way that was so simple and effective.  Even with Margaret there was no trace of consciousness.  The past was wiped clean of all save courtesy and kindness.  There were the Hunts—­Nellie, and the Lieutenant of the Lexington Rifles, Richard Hunt, a dauntless-looking dare-devil, with the ready tongue of a coffee-house wit and the grace of a cavalier.  There was Elizabeth Morgan, to whom Harry’s grave eyes were always wandering, and Miss Jennie Overstreet, who was romantic and openly now wrote poems for the Observer, and who looked at Chad with no attempt to conceal her admiration of his appearance and her wonder as to who he was.  And there were the neighbors roundabout—­the Talbotts, Quisenberrys, Clays, Prestons, Morgans—­surely no less than forty strong, and all for dinner.  It was no little trial for Chad in that crowd of fine ladies, judges, soldiers, lawyers, statesmen—­but he stood it well.  While his self-consciousness made him awkward, he had pronounced dignity of bearing; his diffidence emphasized his modesty, and he had the good sense to stand and keep still.  Soon they were at table—­and what a table and what a dinner that was!  The dining-room was the biggest and sunniest room in the house; its walls covered with hunting prints, pictures of game and stag heads.  The table ran the length of it.  The snowy tablecloth hung almost to the floor.  At the head sat Mrs. Dean, with a great tureen of calf’s head soup in front of her.  Before the General was the saddle of venison that was to follow, drenched in a bottle of ancient Madeira, and flanked by flakes of red-currant

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The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.