[St. George and St. Michael by George MacDonald]@TWC D-Link book
St. George and St. Michael

CHAPTER XXXVI
3/9

It was a small thing that she had not had a right gallop since she left Wyfern; the strength she had been putting forth to bear the Atlas burden that night lifted from her soul, was now left free to upbear her, and she seemed in spirit to soar aloft into the regions of aether.

With her horse under her, the moon over her, "the wind of their own speed" around them, and her heart beating with a joy such as she had never known, she could hardly help doubting sometimes for a moment whether she was not out in one of those delightful dreams of liberty and motion which had so frequently visited her sleep since she came to Raglan.

Three shrill whistles she had blown, about a hundred yards from the gate, had heard the eager crowded bark of her dog in answer, and then Dick went flying over the fields like a water-bird over the lake, that scratches its smooth surface with its feet as it flies.

Around the rampart they went.
The still night was jubilant around them as they flew.

The stars shone as if they knew all about her joy, that the shadow of guilt had been lifted from her, and that to her the world again was fair.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books