The Squire of Sandal-Side A Pastoral Romance
THE SQUIRE OF SANDAL-SIDE A Pastoral Romance by AMELIA E. BARR Author of "Jan Vedder's Wife," "A Daughter of Fife," "The Bow of Orange Ribbon," etc. New York The A.D. Porter Co. Publishers 1886
So short a while ago as they climbed the cliffs at Montcontour, there
had been a vague hope in either mind, an uneasy joy for which they
dared not account to themselves; but now as they came along the
pathway by the river, they pulled down the frail structure of
imaginings, the child's cardcastle, on which neither of them had dared
to breathe. That hope was over.
That very evening Lord Grenville left them. His last look at Julie
made it miserably plain that since the moment when sympathy revealed
the full extent of a tyrannous passion, he did well to mistrust
himself.
The next morning, M. d'Aiglemont and his wife took their places in the
carriage without their traveling companion, and were whirled swiftly
along the road to Blois. The Marquise was constantly put in mind of
the journey made in 1814, when as yet she know nothing of love, and
had been almost ready to curse it for its persistency. Countless
forgotten impressions were revived. The heart has its own memory. A
woman who cannot recollect the most important great events will
recollect through a lifetime things which appealed to her feelings;
and Julie d'Aiglemont found all the most trifling details of that
journey laid up in her mind. It was pleasant to her to recall its
little incidents as they occurred to her one by one; there were points
in the road when she could even remember the thoughts that passed
through her mind when she saw them first.
THE SQUIRE OF SANDAL-SIDE A Pastoral Romance by AMELIA E. BARR Author of "Jan Vedder's Wife," "A Daughter of Fife," "The Bow of Orange Ribbon," etc. New York The A.D. Porter Co. Publishers 1886