Mary Marston

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Mary Marston by George MacDonald, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: George MacDonald ISBN: 9781465550965
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: George MacDonald
ISBN: 9781465550965
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
THE SHOP It was an evening early in May. The sun was low, and the street was mottled with the shadows of its paving-stones—smooth enough, but far from evenly set. The sky was clear, except for a few clouds in the west, hardly visible in the dazzle of the huge light, which lay among them like a liquid that had broken its vessel, and was pouring over the fragments. The street was almost empty, and the air was chill. The spring was busy, and the summer was at hand; but the wind was blowing from the north. The street was not a common one; there was interest, that is feature, in the shadowy front of almost each of its old houses. Not a few of them wore, indeed, something like a human expression, the look of having both known and suffered. From many a porch, and many a latticed oriel, a long shadow stretched eastward, like a death flag streaming in a wind unfelt of the body—or a fluttering leaf, ready to yield, and flit away, and add one more to the mound of blackness gathering on the horizon's edge. It was the main street of an old country town, dwindled by the rise of larger and more prosperous places, but holding and exercising a charm none of them would ever gain. Some of the oldest of its houses, most of them with more than one projecting story, stood about the middle of the street. The central and oldest of these was a draper's shop. The windows of the ground-floor encroached a little on the pavement, to which they descended very close, for the floor of the shop was lower than the street. But, although they had glass on three oriel sides, they were little used for the advertising of the stores within. A few ribbons and gay handkerchiefs, mostly of cotton, for the eyes of the country people on market-days, formed the chief part of their humble show. The door was wide and very low, the upper half of it of glass—old, and bottle-colored; and its threshold was a deep step down into the shop.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
THE SHOP It was an evening early in May. The sun was low, and the street was mottled with the shadows of its paving-stones—smooth enough, but far from evenly set. The sky was clear, except for a few clouds in the west, hardly visible in the dazzle of the huge light, which lay among them like a liquid that had broken its vessel, and was pouring over the fragments. The street was almost empty, and the air was chill. The spring was busy, and the summer was at hand; but the wind was blowing from the north. The street was not a common one; there was interest, that is feature, in the shadowy front of almost each of its old houses. Not a few of them wore, indeed, something like a human expression, the look of having both known and suffered. From many a porch, and many a latticed oriel, a long shadow stretched eastward, like a death flag streaming in a wind unfelt of the body—or a fluttering leaf, ready to yield, and flit away, and add one more to the mound of blackness gathering on the horizon's edge. It was the main street of an old country town, dwindled by the rise of larger and more prosperous places, but holding and exercising a charm none of them would ever gain. Some of the oldest of its houses, most of them with more than one projecting story, stood about the middle of the street. The central and oldest of these was a draper's shop. The windows of the ground-floor encroached a little on the pavement, to which they descended very close, for the floor of the shop was lower than the street. But, although they had glass on three oriel sides, they were little used for the advertising of the stores within. A few ribbons and gay handkerchiefs, mostly of cotton, for the eyes of the country people on market-days, formed the chief part of their humble show. The door was wide and very low, the upper half of it of glass—old, and bottle-colored; and its threshold was a deep step down into the shop.

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book A Short History of English Printing, 1476-1898 by George MacDonald
Cover of the book Among the Brigands by George MacDonald
Cover of the book Honest Abe: A Study in Integrity Based on the Early Life of Abraham Lincoln by George MacDonald
Cover of the book Our Army at the Front by George MacDonald
Cover of the book The Mother of Washington and Her Times by George MacDonald
Cover of the book Sam Lawson's Oldtown Fireside Stories by George MacDonald
Cover of the book Un Philosophe Sous Les Toits by George MacDonald
Cover of the book Optimism: An Essay by George MacDonald
Cover of the book Illusions: A Psychological Study by George MacDonald
Cover of the book A Captain in The Ranks: A Romance of Affairs by George MacDonald
Cover of the book American Prisoners of the Revolution by George MacDonald
Cover of the book Mattie: A Stray (Complete) by George MacDonald
Cover of the book Classical Hindu Erotology by George MacDonald
Cover of the book The Ball at Sceaux by George MacDonald
Cover of the book By the Sea and Other Verses by George MacDonald
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy