A MERE ACCIDENT.
BY
GEORGE MOORE
AUTHOR OF "A MUMMER'S WIFE," "A MODERN LOVER," "A DRAMA IN MUSLIN," "SPRING DAYS," ETC.
Fifth Edition
TO
My Friends at Buckingham.
Nearly twenty years have gone since first we met, dear friends; time has but strengthened our early affections, so for love token, for sign of the years, I bring you this book--these views of your beautiful house and hills where I have spent so many happy days, these last perhaps the happiest of all.
G. M.
CHAPTER I.
Three hundred yards of smooth, broad, white road leading from Henfield, a small town in Sussex. The grasses are lush, and the hedges are tall and luxuriant. Restless boys scramble to and fro, quiet nursemaids loiter, and a vagrant has sat down to rest though the bank is dripping with autumn rain. How fair a prospect of southern England! Land of exquisite homeliness and order; land of town that is country, of country that is town; land of a hundred classes all deftly interwoven and all waxing to one class--England. Land encrowned with the gifts of peaceful days--days that live in thy face and the faces of thy children.
See it. The outlying villas with their porches and laurels, the red tiled farm houses, and the brown barns, clustering beneath the wings of beautiful trees--elm trees; see the flat plots of ground of the market gardens, with figures bending over baskets of roots; see the factory chimney; there are trees and gables everywhere; see the end of the terrace, the gleam of glass, the flower vase, the flitting white of the tennis players; see the long fields with the long team ploughing, see the parish church, see the embowering woods, see the squire's house, see everything and love it, for everything here is England.
* * * * *
Three hundred yards of smooth, broad, white road, leading from Henfield, a small town in Sussex. It disappears in the woods which lean across the fields towards the downs. The great bluff heights can be seen, and at the point where the roads cross, where the tall trunks are listed with golden light, stands a large wooden gate and a small box-like lodge. A lonely place in a densely-populated county. The gatekeeper is blind, and his flute sounds doleful and strange, and the leaves are falling.
The private road is short and stony. Apparently space was found for it with difficulty, and it got wedged between an enormous holly hedge and a stiff wooden paling. But overhead the great branches fight upwards through a tortuous growth to the sky, and, as you advance, Thornby Place continues to puzzle you with its medley of curious and contradictory aspects. For as the second gate, which is in iron, is approached, your thoughts of rural things are rudely scattered by sight of what seems a London mews. Reason with yourself. This very urban feature is occasioned by the high brick wall which runs parallel with the stables, and this, as you pass round to the front of the house, is hidden in the clothing foliage of a line of evergreen oaks; continuing along the lawn, the trees bend about the house--a wash of Naples-yellow, a few sharp Italian lines and angles. To complete the sketch, indicate the wings of the blown rooks on the sullen sky.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Mere Accident by George Moore
- 2: Thornby Place is but two stories high
- 3: Which John occasionally spent at Thornby Place
- 4: Presently a silhouette appeared on the sullen sky
- 5: Mrs Norton saw in marriage nothing but the child
- 6: On coming of age he had spent a few weeks at Thornby Place
- 7: Mrs Norton was a woman with an intelligence
- 8: I must insist My dear Lizzie
- 9: Or you might encourage him in them
- 10: Those that Hellenism had not touched
- 11: And went to live at Thornby Place
- 12: Around which was built a staircase in varnished oak
- 13: They were a little meaningless no
- 14: The smug materialism of Sussex at such a season
- 15: Though the funeral was painfully obscene
- 16: Passing through the communion rails
- 17: He led the way to the sacristy
- 18: The antique world knew how to idealise
- 19: Fingit would not be pure Latin
- 20: Personally I cannot bear upholstery
- 21: Had upon the instrument the Latin language
- 22: Listen 'Quae tunc spectaculi latitudo
- 23: The hymns of Prudentius are three
- 24: I was saying just now that the hymns of Prudentius
- 25: And Sobriety fells her with a stone
- 26: Radegonde was the daughter of the King of Thuringia
- 27: Fistula versus David amat versus
- 28: For that implies that the story is untrue
- 29: I say I cannot sleep on a feather bed
- 30: I don't believe in the fish manure
- 31: You won't go out to walk with Kitty Hare
- 32: Further on her two tame rooks cawed joyously
- 33: Don't you think that we should retrench
- 34: The huntsman muttered something inaudible
- 35: But you were only slightly delirious
- 36: Remembrance of his blasphemies grew stronger and fiercer
- 37: He was to John Norton a blank sheet of paper
- 38: Mrs Norton could not speak the words
- 39: But to return to Thornby Place alone was impossible
- 40: Have you had a quarrel with the Jesuits
- 41: I am going to turn Thornby Place into a monastery
- 42: But John Norton had no passion
- 43: The large gable in front to have a large cross at apex
- 44: And put a lavatory at one end of the ambulatory
- 45: He drew facades and turrets on the cloth during dinner
- 46: Morning he was surprised at not seeing Kitty at breakfast
- 47: Followed and flowed fitfully fitfully as his thoughts
- 48: And about the rockery there are purple bunches of lilac
- 49: The delicate plenitudes bound with white cambric
- 50: Fistula versus David amat versus
- 51: As fragrance is inherent in the summer time
- 52: And the Gothic walls he would raise
- 53: The rooks were flying about the elms
- 54: Until he had been refused by Kitty
- 55: And right up to Toddington Mount
- 56: You never heard of the legend of St Cuthman
- 57: St Cuthman wished the first hour would pass
- 58: At the dyke he worked on until midnight drew near
- 59: Thornby Place was hidden in vapour
- 60: Protestantism would again be established at Thornby Place
- 61: And tennis was played unceasingly
- 62: Then on the left hand towards Brighton
- 63: Very mechanically she picked bits of furze from her dress
- 64: In front Shoreham rose out of the massy trees of Leywood
- 65: There is her work basket by the fireplace
- 66: A million flower cups and flower chalices
- 67: The stain might be easily seen
- 68: And the cemetery becomes a deep green
- 69: And that expression gave way to a sense of nausea
- 70: There were phantoms there were two phantoms
- 71: She strove to allow him to take her hand
- 72: He helped to lift Kitty from the tiles
- 73: But such sorrow cannot affect John Norton
- 74: Past the shadowy marshy shores
- 75: A great Eucharis lily had been laid
- 76: And walking quickly down the pier
