[Eve’s Ransom by George Gissing]@TWC D-Link bookEve’s Ransom CHAPTER XXVII 9/9
He slept at a cottage, and on the Sunday morning walked idly about the lanes. A white frost had suddenly hastened the slow decay of mellow autumn. Low on the landscape lay a soft mist, dense enough to conceal everything at twenty yards away, but suffused with golden sunlight; overhead shone the clear blue sky.
Roadside trees and hedges, their rich tints softened by the medium through which they were discerned, threw shadows of exquisite faintness.
A perfect quiet possessed the air, but from every branch, as though shaken by some invisible hand, dead foliage dropped to earth in a continuous shower; softly pattering from beech to maple, or with the heavier fall of ash-leaves, while at long intervals sounded the thud of apples tumbling from a crab-tree. Thick-clustered berries arrayed the hawthorns, the briar was rich in scarlet fruit; everywhere the frost had left the adornment of its subtle artistry.
Each leaf upon the hedge shone silver-outlined; spiders' webs, woven from stein to stem, glistened in the morning radiance; the grasses by the way side stood stark in gleaming mail. And Maurice Hilliard, a free man in his own conceit, sang to himself a song of the joy of life. THE END..
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