Deadham Hard

Lucas Malet
Deadham Hard

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Title: Deadham Hard
Author: Lucas Malet
Release Date: June 4, 2004 [eBook #12520]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DEADHAM
HARD***
E-text prepared by Charles Aldarondo, Project Gutenberg Beginners'
Projects, Mary Meehan, and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed
Proofreading Team

DEADHAM HARD
A Romance
BY LUCAS MALET
(MARY ST. LEGER HARRISON)
Author of "Sir Richard Calmady," "The Wages of Sin," etc.
1919

"Youth has no boundaries, age has the grave."--BULGARIAN
PROVERB

TO MY DEAR FRIEND ACROSS THE OCEAN C. E. O. VEVEY
1899 LONDON 1919

CONTENTS
BOOK I THE HOUSE OF THE TAMARISKS

CHAPTER
I. TELLING HOW, UNDER STRESS OF CIRCUMSTANCES, A
HUMANIST TURNED HERMIT
II. ENTER A YOUNG SCHOLAR AND GENTLEMAN OF A
HAPPY DISPOSITION AND GOOD PROSPECTS
III. THE DOUBTFULLY HARMONIOUS PARTS OF A WHOLE
IV. WATCHERS THROUGH THE SMALL HOURS
V. BETWEEN RIVER AND SEA
VI. IN WHICH THE PAST LAYS AN OMINOUS HAND ON THE
PRESENT
VII. A CRITIC IN CORDUROY
BOOK II THE HARD SCHOOL OF THINGS AS THEY ARE
I. IN MAIDEN MEDITATION
II. WHICH CANTERS ROUND A PARISH PUMP
III. A SAMPLING OF FREEDOM
IV. OUT ON THE BAR
V. WHEREIN DAMARIS MAKES SOME ACQUAINTANCE WITH
THE HIDDEN WAYS OF MEN
VI. RECOUNTING AN ASTONISHING DEPOSITION
VII. A SOUL AT WAR WITH FACT

VIII. TELLING HOW TWO PERSONS, OF VERY DIFFERENT
MORAL CALIBRE, WERE COMPELLED TO WEAR THE
FLOWER OF HUMILIATION IN THEIR RESPECTIVE
BUTTONHOLES
IX. AN EXPERIMENT IN BRIDGE-BUILDING OF WHICH TIME
ALONE CAN FIX THE VALUES
X. TELLING HOW MISS FELICIA VERITY UNSUCCESSFULLY
ATTEMPTED A RESCUE
XI. IN WHICH DAMARIS RECEIVES INFORMATION OF THE
LOST SHOES AND STOCKINGS--ASSUMPTION OF THE
GOD-HEAD
XII. CONCERNING A SERMON WHICH NEVER WAS
PREACHED AND OTHER MATTERS OF LOCAL INTEREST
BOOK III THE WORLD BEYOND THE FOREST
I. AN EPISODE IN THE EMOTIONAL EXPERIENCE OF THE
MAN WITH THE BLUE EYES
II. TELLING HOW DAMARIS RENEWED HER ACQUAINTANCE
WITH THE BELOVED LADY OF HER INFANCY
III. WHICH CONCERNS ITSELF, INCIDENTALLY, WITH THE
GRIEF OF A VICTIM OF CIRCUMSTANCE AND THE
RECEPTION OF A BELATED CHRISTMAS GREETING
IV. BLOWING ONE'S OWN TRUMPET PRACTISED AS A FINE
ART
V. IN WHICH HENRIETTA PULLS THE STRINGS
VI. CARNIVAL--AND AFTER
VII. TELLING HOW DAMARIS DISCOVERED THE TRUE
NATURE OF A CERTAIN SECRET TO THE DEAR MAN WITH

THE BLUE EYES
VIII. FIDUS ACHATES
IX. WHICH FEATURES VARIOUS PERSONS WITH WHOM THE
READER IS ALREADY ACQUAINTED
X. WHICH IT IS TO BE FEARED SMELLS SOMEWHAT
POWERFULLY OF BILGE WATER
XI. WHEREIN DAMARIS MEETS HERSELF UNDER A NOVEL
ASPECT
XII. CONCERNING ITSELF WITH A GATHERING UP OF
FRAGMENTS
XIII. WHICH RECOUNTS A TAKING OF SANCTUARY
BOOK IV THROUGH SHADOWS TOWARDS THE DAWN
I. WHICH CARRIES OVER A TALE OF YEARS, AND CARRIES
ON
II. RECALLING, IN SOME PARTICULARS, THE EASIEST
RECORDED THEFT IN HUMAN HISTORY
III. BROTHER AND SISTER
IV. WHEREIN MISS FELICIA VERITY CONCLUSIVELY SHOWS
WHAT SPIRIT SHE IS OF
V. DEALING WITH EMBLEMS, OMENS AND
DEMONSTRATIONS
VI. SHOWING HOW SIR CHARLES VERITY WAS JUSTIFIED OF
HIS LABOURS
VII. TELLING HOW CHARLES VERITY LOOKED ON THE
MOTHER OF HIS SON

CHAPTER THE
EIGHTH WHICH IS ALSO
CHAPTER THE
LAST

BOOK I
THE HOUSE OF THE TAMARISKS

CHAPTER I
TELLING HOW, UNDER STRESS OF CIRCUMSTANCE, A
HUMANIST TURNED HERMIT
A peculiar magic resides in running water, as every student of
earth-lore knows. There is high magic, too, in the marriage of rivers, so
that the spot where two mingle their streams is sacred, endowed with
strange properties of evocation and of purification. Such spots go to the
making of history and ruling of individual lives; but whether their
influence is not more often malign than beneficent may be, perhaps,
open to doubt.
Certain it is, however, that no doubts of this description troubled the
mind of Thomas Clarkson Verity, when, in the closing decade of the
eighteenth century, he purchased the house at Deadham Hard, known
as Tandy's Castle, overlooking the deep and comparatively narrow
channel by which the Rivers Arne and Wilner, after crossing the
tide-flats and salt-marsh of Marychurch Haven, make their swift united
exit into Marychurch Bay. Neither was he troubled by the fact that
Tandy's Castle--or more briefly and familiarly Tandy's--for all its
commonplace outward decency of aspect did not enjoy an unblemished
moral or social reputation. The house--a whitewashed, featureless
erection--was planted at right angles to the deep sandy lane leading up
from the shore, through the scattered village of Deadham, to
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