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      The Son Of Royal Langbrith

      WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS

      

      

      

       The Son of Royal Langbrith, W. D. Howells

       Jazzybee Verlag Jürgen Beck

       86450 Altenmünster, Loschberg 9

       Deutschland

      

       ISBN: 9783849657772

      

       www.jazzybee-verlag.de

       [email protected]

      

      

      

      CONTENTS:

       I. 1

       II 4

       III. 7

       IV.. 10

       V.. 13

       VI 17

       VII 21

       VIII 25

       IX.. 30

       X.. 33

       XI 37

       XII 41

       XIII 47

       XIV.. 56

       XV.. 64

       XVI 67

       XVII 76

       XVIII 84

       XIX.. 88

       XX.. 93

       XXI 98

       XXII 103

       XXIII 109

       XXIV.. 115

       XXV.. 121

       XXVI 128

       XXVII 134

       XXVIII 140

       XXIX.. 144

       XXX.. 149

       XXXI 153

       XXXII 158

       XXXIII 166

       XXXIV.. 170

       XXXV.. 175

       XXXVI 183

       XXXVII 187

      I.

      “We’re neither of us young people, I know, and I can very well believe that you had not thought of marrying again. I can account for your surprise at my offer, even your disgust—” Dr. Anther hesitated.

      “Oh no!” Mrs. Langbrith protested.

      “But I can’t see why it should be ‘terrible,’ as you call it. If you had asked me simply to take ‘ no ’ for an answer, I could have taken it. Or taken it better.’’

      He looked at her with a wounded air, and she said, “I didn’t mean ‘terrible’ in that way. I was only thinking of it for myself, or not so much myself as — someone.” She glanced at him, where, tenderly indignant with her, he stood by the window, quite across the room, and she seemed to wish to say more, but let her eyes drop without saying more.

      He was silent, too, for a time which he allowed to prolong itself in the apparent expectation that she would break their silence. But he had to speak first. “I don’t like mysteries. I can forget—or ignore—any sense of ‘ terrible ’ you had in mind, if you will tell me one thing. Do you ask me now to take simply ‘no’ for an answer?”

      ‘‘Oh no!” The words were as if surprised from her, and she made with her catching breath as if she would have caught them back.

      He came quickly across the room to her. “ What is it, Amelia?”

      “ I can’t tell you,” she shuddered out, and she recoiled, pulling herself up, as if she wished to escape but felt an impenetrable hinderance at her back. In the action, she showed taller than she was, and more girlishly slender. At forty, after her wifehood of three years and her widowhood of nineteen years, the inextinguishable innocence of girlhood, which keeps itself through all the experiences of a good woman’s life, was pathetic in her appealing eyes; and the mourning, subdued to the paler shades of purple, which she permanently wore, would have made a stranger think of an orphan rather than a widow in her presence.

      Anther’s burly frame arrested itself at her recoil. His florid face, clean shaven at a time when nearly all men wore beards, was roughed to a sort of community of tint with his brown overcoat by the weather of many winters’ and summers’ driving in his country practice. His iron-gray hair, worn longer than the fashion was in towns, fell down his temples and neck from under his soft hat. He had on his driving gloves, and he had his whip in one hand. He had followed Mrs. Langbrith indoors in that figure from the gate, where his unkempt old horse stood with his mud spattered buggy, to pursue the question which she tried rather than wished to shun, and he did not know that he had not uncovered. At the pathos in her eyes and in her cheeks, which had the vertical hollows showing oftener in youth than in

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