The Woman in White eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 909 pages of information about The Woman in White.

The Woman in White eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 909 pages of information about The Woman in White.
be.  He greeted me, on the evening of his return, with little or nothing of the ceremony and civility of former times—­no polite speeches of welcome—­no appearance of extraordinary gratification at seeing me—­nothing but a short shake of the hand, and a sharp “How-d’ye-do, Miss Halcombe—­glad to see you again.”  He seemed to accept me as one of the necessary fixtures of Blackwater Park, to be satisfied at finding me established in my proper place, and then to pass me over altogether.

Most men show something of their disposition in their own houses, which they have concealed elsewhere, and Sir Percival has already displayed a mania for order and regularity, which is quite a new revelation of him, so far as my previous knowledge of his character is concerned.  If I take a book from the library and leave it on the table, he follows me and puts it back again.  If I rise from a chair, and let it remain where I have been sitting, he carefully restores it to its proper place against the wall.  He picks up stray flower-blossoms from the carpet, and mutters to himself as discontentedly as if they were hot cinders burning holes in it, and he storms at the servants if there is a crease in the tablecloth, or a knife missing from its place at the dinner-table, as fiercely as if they had personally insulted him.

I have already referred to the small annoyances which appear to have troubled him since his return.  Much of the alteration for the worse which I have noticed in him may be due to these.  I try to persuade myself that it is so, because I am anxious not to be disheartened already about the future.  It is certainly trying to any man’s temper to be met by a vexation the moment he sets foot in his own house again, after a long absence, and this annoying circumstance did really happen to Sir Percival in my presence.

On the evening of their arrival the housekeeper followed me into the hall to receive her master and mistress and their guests.  The instant he saw her, Sir Percival asked if any one had called lately.  The housekeeper mentioned to him, in reply, what she had previously mentioned to me, the visit of the strange gentleman to make inquiries about the time of her master’s return.  He asked immediately for the gentleman’s name.  No name had been left.  The gentleman’s business?  No business had been mentioned.  What was the gentleman like?  The housekeeper tried to describe him, but failed to distinguish the nameless visitor by any personal peculiarity which her master could recognise.  Sir Percival frowned, stamped angrily on the floor, and walked on into the house, taking no notice of anybody.  Why he should have been so discomposed by a trifle I cannot say—­but he was seriously discomposed, beyond all doubt.

Upon the whole, it will be best, perhaps, if I abstain from forming a decisive opinion of his manners, language, and conduct in his own house, until time has enabled him to shake off the anxieties, whatever they may be, which now evidently troubled his mind in secret.  I will turn over to a new page, and my pen shall let Laura’s husband alone for the present.

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The Woman in White from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.