[Margret Howth<br> A Story of To-day by Rebecca Harding Davis]@TWC D-Link book
Margret Howth
A Story of To-day

CHAPTER VIII
13/19

What part in the eternal order could THAT hold?
or slavery, or secession, or civil war?
No harmony could be infinite enough to hold such discords, he thought, pushing the whole matter from him in despair.

Why, the experiment of self-government, the problem of the ages, was crumbling in ruin! So he despaired, just as Tige did the night the mill fell about his ears, in full confidence that the world had come to an end now, without hope of salvation,--crawling out of his cellar in dumb amazement, when the sun rose as usual the next morning.
Knowles sat, peering at Holmes over his paper, watching the languid breath that showed how deep the hurt had been, the maimed body, the face outwardly cool, watchful, reticent as before.

He fancied the slough of disappointment into which God had crushed the soul of this man: would he struggle out?
Would he take Miss Herne as the first step in his stair-way, or be content to be flung down in vigorous manhood to the depth of impotent poverty?
He could not tell if the quiet on Holmes's face were stolid defiance or submission: the dumb kings might have looked thus beneath the feet of Pharaoh.

When he walked over the floor, too, weak as he was it was with the old iron tread.

He asked Knowles presently what business he had gone into.
"My old hobby in an humble way,--the House of Refuge." They both laughed.
"Yes, it is true.


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