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       Mary Johnston

      Hagar

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066248536

       CHAPTER I THE PACKET-BOAT

       CHAPTER II GILEAD BALM

       CHAPTER III THE DESCENT OF MAN

       CHAPTER IV THE CONVICT

       CHAPTER V MARIA

       CHAPTER VI EGLANTINE

       CHAPTER VII MR. LAYDON

       CHAPTER VIII HAGAR AND LAYDON

       CHAPTER IX ROMEO AND JULIET

       CHAPTER X GILEAD BALM

       CHAPTER XI THE LETTERS

       CHAPTER XII A MEETING

       CHAPTER XIII THE NEW SPRINGS

       CHAPTER XIV NEW YORK

       CHAPTER XV LOOKING FOR THOMASINE

       CHAPTER XVI THE MAINES

       CHAPTER XVII THE SOCIALIST MEETING

       CHAPTER XVIII A TELEGRAM

       CHAPTER XIX ALEXANDRIA

       CHAPTER XX MEDWAY

       CHAPTER XXI AT ROGER MICHAEL'S

       CHAPTER XXII HAGAR IN LONDON

       CHAPTER XXIII BY THE SEA

       CHAPTER XXIV DENNY GAYDE

       CHAPTER XXV HAGAR AND DENNY

       CHAPTER XXVI GILEAD BALM

       CHAPTER XXVII A DIFFERENCE OF OPINION

       CHAPTER XXVIII NEW YORK AGAIN

       CHAPTER XXIX ROSE DARRAGH

       CHAPTER XXX AN OLD ACQUAINTANCE

       CHAPTER XXXI JOHN FAY

       CHAPTER XXXII RALPH

       CHAPTER XXXIII GILEAD BALM

       CHAPTER XXXIV BRITTANY

      HAGAR

       THE PACKET-BOAT

       Table of Contents

      "Low Braidge!"

      The people on deck bent over, some until heads touched knees, others, more exactly calculating, just sufficiently to clear the beams. The canal-boat passed beneath the bridge, and all straightened themselves on their camp-stools. The gentlemen who were smoking put their cigars again between their lips. The two or three ladies resumed book or knitting. The sun was low, and the sycamores and willows fringing the banks cast long shadows across the canal. The northern bank was not so clothed with foliage, and one saw an expanse of bottom land, meadows and cornfields, and beyond, low mountains, purple in the evening light. The boat slipped from a stripe of gold into a stripe of shadow, and from a stripe of shadow into a stripe of gold. The negro and the mule on the towpath were now but a bit of dusk in motion, and now were lit and, so to speak, powdered with gold-dust. Now the rope between boat and towpath showed an arm-thick golden serpent, and now it did not show at all. Now a little cloud of gnats and flies, accompanying the boat, shone in burnished armour and now they put on a mantle of shade.

      A dark little girl, of twelve years, dark and thin, sitting aft on the deck floor, her long, white-stockinged legs folded decorously under her, her blue gingham skirt spread out, and her Leghorn hat upon her knees, appealed to one of the reading ladies. "Aunt Serena, what is 'evolution'?"

      Miss Serena Ashendyne laid down her book. "'Evolution,'" she said blankly, "'what is evolution?'"

      "I heard grandfather say it just now. He said, 'That man Darwin and his evolution'—"

      "Oh!" said Miss Serena. "He meant a very wicked and irreligious Englishman who wrote a dreadful book."

      "Was it named 'Evolution'?"

      "No. I forget just what it is called. 'Beginning'—No! 'Origin of Species.' That was it."

      "Have we got it in the library at Gilead Balm?"

      "Heavens! No!"

      "Why?"

      "Your grandfather wouldn't let it come into the house. No lady would read it."

      "Oh!"

      Miss Serena returned to her novel. She sat very elegantly on the camp-stool, a graceful, long-lined, drooping form in a greenish-grey delaine picked out with tiny daisies. It was made polonaise.

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