The Wings of the Dove (Classic Reprint)
Description:... Excerpt from The Wings of the Dove Her father's life, her sister's, her own, that of her two lost brothers - the whole history of their house had the effect of some fine florid, voluminous phrase, say even a musical, that dropped first into words, into notes, with out sense, and then, hanging unfinished, into no words, no notes at all. Why should a set of people have been put in motion, on such a scale and with such an air of being equipped for a profitable journey, only to break down without an accident, to stretch themselves in the way side dust without a reason? The answer to these questions was not in Chirk Street, but the questions themselves bristled, there, and the girl's repeated pause before the mirror and the chimney-place might have represented her nearest approach to an escape from them. Was it not in fact the partial escape from this 'worst' in which she was steeped to be able to make herself out again as agreeable to see? She stared into the tarnished glass too hard indeed to be staring at her beauty alone. She readjusted the poise of her black, closely feathered hat; retouched, beneath it, the thick fall of her dusky hair; kept her eyes, aslant, no less on her beautiful averted than on her beautiful presented oval. She was dressed altogether in black, which gave an even tone, by contrast, to her clear face and made her hair more harmoniously dark. Outside, on the balcony, her eyes showed as blue within, at the mirror.
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