The Elect Lady | Page 3

George MacDonald
indicate weakness. More than one, however,
of the strongest women I have known, were defective in chin. The
young man was in the only first-class carriage of the train, and alone in
it. Dressed in a gray suit, he was a little too particular in the smaller
points of his attire, and lacked in consequence something of the look of
a gentleman. Every now and then he would take off his hard round hat,
and pass a white left hand through his short-cut mousey hair, while his
right caressed a far longer mustache, in which he seemed interested. A
certain indescribable heaviness and lack of light characterized his pale
face.
It was a lovely day in early June. The air was rather cold, but youth and
health care little about temperature on a holiday, with the sun shining,
and that sweetest sense--to such at least as are ordinarily bound by
routine--of having nothing to do. To many men and women the greatest
trouble is to choose, for self is the hardest of masters to please; but as
yet George Crawford had not been troubled with much choosing.
A crowded town behind him, the loneliness he looked upon was a
pleasure to him. Compelled to spend time in it, without the sense of
being on the way out of it, his own company would soon have grown
irksome to him; for however much men may be interested in
themselves, there are few indeed who are interesting to themselves.
Those only whose self is aware of a higher presence can escape
becoming bores and disgusts to themselves. That every man is
endlessly greater than what he calls himself, must seem a paradox to
the ignorant and dull, but a universe would be impossible without it.
George had not arrived at the discovery of this fact, and yet was for the

present contented both with himself and with his circumstances.
The heather was not in bloom, and the few flowers of the heathy land
made no show. Brown and darker brown predominated, with here and
there a shadow of green; and, weary of his outlook, George was settling
back to his book, when there came a great bang and a tearing sound. He
started to his feet, and for hours knew nothing more. A truck had run
off the line and turned over; the carriage in which he was had followed
it, and one of the young man's legs was broken.

CHAPTER III.
HELP.
"Papa! papa! there is an accident on the line!" cried Miss Fordyce,
running into her father's study, where he sat surrounded with books. "I
saw it from the door!"
"Hush!" returned the old man, and listened. "I hear the train going on,"
he said, after a moment.
"Part of it is come to grief, I am certain," answered his daughter. "I saw
something fall."
"Well, my dear?"
"What shall we do?"
"What would you have us do?" rejoined her father, without a
movement toward rising. "It is too far off for us to be of any use."
"We ought to go and see."
"I am not fond of such seeing, Alexa, and will not go out of my way for
it. The misery I can not avoid is enough for me."
But Alexa was out of the room, and in a moment more was running, in

as straight a line as she could keep, across the heath to the low
embankment. Andrew caught sight of her running. He could not see the
line, but convinced that something was the matter, turned and ran in the
same direction.
It was a hard and long run for Alexa, over such ground. Troubled at her
father's indifference, she ran the faster--too fast for thinking, but not too
fast for the thoughts that came of themselves. What had come to her
father? Their house was the nearest! She could not shut out the
conviction that, since succeeding to the property, he had been growing
less and less neighborly.
She had caught up a bottle of brandy, which impeded her running. Yet
she made good speed, her dress gathered high in the other hand. Her
long dark hair broken loose and flying in the wind, her assumed dignity
forgotten, and only the woman awake, she ran like a deer over the
heather, and in little more than a quarter of an hour, though it was a
long moor-mile, reached the embankment, flushed and panting.
Some of the carriages had rolled down, and the rails were a wreck. But
the engine and half the train had kept on: neither driver nor stoker was
hurt, and they were hurrying to fetch help from the next station. At the
foot of the bank lay George Crawford insensible, with the guard of the
train doing what he could to
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