The Last Chronicle of Barset eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,290 pages of information about The Last Chronicle of Barset.

The Last Chronicle of Barset eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,290 pages of information about The Last Chronicle of Barset.

‘I hardly know what your own feelings are, my dear.’

’Yes, you do.  You do know.  If I had all the world to give, I would give it all to Major Grantly.’

‘Tell him that, then.’

’No, I will not tell him that.  Never mind about my frock, Mrs Robarts.  I do not care for that.  I will tell him that I love his son and his granddaughter too well to injure them.  I will tell him nothing else.  I might as well go now.’  Mrs Robarts, as she looked at Grace, was astonished at the serenity of her face.  And yet when her hand was in the drawing-room door Grace hesitated, looked back, and trembled.  Mrs Robarts blew a kiss to her from the stairs; and then the door was opened, and the girl found herself in the presence of the archdeacon.  He was standing on the rug, with his back to the fire, and his heavy ecclesiastical hat was placed on the middle of the round table.  The hat caught Grace’s eyes at the moment of her entrance, and she felt that all the thunders of the Church were contained within it.  And then the archdeacon himself was so big and so clerical, and so imposing.  Her father’s aspect was severe, but the severity of her father’s face was essentially different from that expressed by the archdeacon.  Whatever impression came from her father came from the man himself.  There was no outward adornment there; there was, so to say, no wig about Mr Crawley.  Now the archdeacon was not exactly adorned; but he was so thoroughly imbued with high clerical belongings and sacerdotal fitnesses as to appear always as a walking, sitting, or standing impersonation of parsondom.  To poor Grace, as she entered the room, he appeared to be a personation of parsondom in its severest aspect.

‘Miss Crawley, I believe?’ said he.

‘Yes, sir,’ said she, curtseying ever so slightly, as she stood before him at some considerable distance.

His first idea was that his son must be indeed a fool if he was going to give up Cosby Lodge and all Barsetshire, and retire to Pau, for so slight and unattractive a creature as he now saw before him.  But this idea stayed with him only for a moment.  As he continued to gaze at her during the interview he came to perceive that there was very much more than he had perceived at the first glance, and that his son, after all, had had eyes to see, though perhaps not a heart to understand.

‘Will you take a chair?’ he said.  Then Grace sat down, still at a distance from the archdeacon, and he kept his place upon the rug.  He felt that there would be a difficulty in making her feel the full force of his eloquence all across the room; and yet he did not know how to bring himself nearer to her.  She became suddenly very important in his eyes, and he was to some extent afraid of her.  She was so slight, so meek, so young; and yet there was about her something so beautifully feminine—­and, withal, so like a lady—­that he felt instinctively that he could not attack her with harsh words. 

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The Last Chronicle of Barset from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.