[St. George and St. Michael by George MacDonald]@TWC D-Link bookSt. George and St. Michael CHAPTER XIII 7/12
Still, the wood-cuts in a certain book she had been familiar with in childhood, commonly called Fox's Book of Martyrs, kept haunting her mind's eye--and were they not Papists into whose hands she had fallen? she said to herself, amused at the vagaries of her own involuntary suggestions. Among the rest, one thing specially caught her attention, both from its size and its complicated strangeness.
It was a huge wheel standing near the wall, supported between two strong uprights--some twelve or fifteen feet in diameter, with about fifty spokes, from every one of which hung a large weight.
Its grotesque and threatful character was greatly increased by the mingling of its one substance with its many shadows on the wall behind it.
So intent was she upon it that she started when lady Margaret spoke. 'Why, mistress Dorothy!' she said, 'you look as if you had wandered into St.Anthony's cave! Here is my lord Herbert to welcome his cousin.' Beside her stood a man rather under the middle stature, but as his back was to the furnace this was about all Dorothy could discover of his appearance, save that he was in the garb of a workman, with bare head and arms, and held in his hand a long iron rod ending in a hook. 'Welcome, indeed, cousin Vaughan!' he said heartily, but without offering his hand, which in truth, although an honest, skilful, and well-fashioned hand, was at the present moment far from fit for a lady's touch. There was something in his voice not altogether strange to Dorothy, but she could not tell of whom or what it reminded her. 'Are you come to take another lesson on the cross-bow ?' he asked with a smile. Then she knew he was the same she had met in the looped chamber beside the arblast.
An occasional slight halt, not impediment, in his speech, was what had remained on her memory.
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