[The Mayor of Troy by Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch]@TWC D-Link bookThe Mayor of Troy CHAPTER V 9/26
I expect Hansombody will join us presently. Scipio, bring out the brown sherry." Now the Major had not invited Dr.Hansombody; yet that he expected him is no less certain than that, while he spoke, Dr.Hansombody was actually lifting the knocker of the front door. How did this happen? The Major--so used was he to the phenomenon-- accepted it as a matter of course.
Hansombody (good soul!) had a wonderful knack of turning up when wanted.
But what attracted him? Was it perchance that magnetic force of will which our Major, and all truly great men, unconsciously exert? No; the explanation was a simpler one, though the Major would have been inexpressibly shocked had he suspected it. Miss Marty and Dr.Hansombody were mutually enamoured. They never told their love.
To acknowledge it nakedly to one another--nay, even to themselves--had been treason.
What? Could Miss Marty disturb the comfort, could her swain destroy the confidence, could they together forfeit the esteem, of their common hero? In converse they would hymn antiphonally his virtues, his graces of mind and person; even as certain heathen fanatics, wounding themselves in honour of their idol, will drown the pain by loud clashings of cymbals. They never told their love, and yet, as the old song says: "But if ne'er so close ye wall him, Do the best that ye may, Blind Love, if so ye call him, He will find out his way." Miss Marty had found out a way. The Major's house, as you have been told, looked down the length of Fore Street; and on the left hand (the harbour side) of Fore Street, at some seventy yards' distance, Dr.Hansombody resided over his dispensary, or, as he preferred to call it, his "Medical Hall." The house stood aligned with its neighbours but overtopped them by an attic storey; and in the north side of this attic a single window looked up the street to the Major's windows--Miss Marty's among the rest--and was visible from them. Behind this attic window the Doctor, when released from professional labours, would sit and read, or busy himself in arranging his cases of butterflies, of which he had a famous collection; and somehow--I cannot tell you when or how, except that it began in merest innocence--Miss Marty had learnt to signal with her window-blind and the Doctor to reply with his.
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