Saint's Progress
Saint's Progress
Book Excerpt
fternoon in the old Abbey had been
almost holy. He had let his senses sink into the sunlit greenery of
the towering woods opposite; he had watched the spiders and the
little shining beetles, the flycatchers, and sparrows in the ivy;
touched the mosses and the lichens; looked the speedwells in the eye;
dreamed of he knew not what. A hawk had been wheeling up there above
the woods, and he had been up there with it in the blue. He had
taken a real spiritual bath, and washed the dusty fret of London off
his soul.
For a year he had been working his parish single-handed--no joke-- for his curate had gone for a chaplain; and this was his first real holiday since the war began, two years ago; his first visit, too, to his brother's home. He looked down at the garden, and up at the trees of the avenue. Bob had found a perfect retreat after his quarter of a century in Ceylon. Dear old Bob! And he smiled at the thought of his elder brother, whose burnt face and fierce grey whiskers somewhat recalled a Bengal ti
Editor's choice
(view all)Popular books in Fiction and Literature, War
Readers reviews
0.0
LoginSign up
Be the first to review this book