waste of breath, the one essential being simply to wait.

At length there was a slight noise in the lane, and the old

pony-chaise appeared indeed outside the railings. They saw alight

therefrom a form which they affected to recognize, but would actually

have passed by in the street without identifying had he not got out

of their carriage at the particular moment when a particular person

was due.

Mrs Clare rushed through the dark passage to the door, and her

husband came more slowly after her.

The new arrival, who was just about to enter, saw their anxious faces

in the doorway and the gleam of the west in their spectacles because

they confronted the last rays of day; but they could only see his

shape against the light.

'O, my boy, my boy--home again at last!' cried Mrs Clare, who cared

no more at that moment for the stains of heterodoxy which had caused

all this separation than for the dust upon his clothes. What woman,

indeed, among the most faithful adherents of the truth, believes the

promises and threats of the Word in the sense in which she believes

in her own children, or would not throw her theology to the wind if

weighed against their happiness? As soon as they reached the room

where the candles were lighted she looked at his face.

'O, it is not Angel--not my son--the Angel who went away!' she cried

in all the irony of sorrow, as she turned herself aside.

His father, too, was shocked to see him, so reduced was that figure

from its former contours by worry and the bad season that Clare had

experienced, in the climate to which he had so rashly hurried in his

first aversion to the mockery of events at home. You could see the

skeleton behind the man, and almost the ghost behind the skeleton.

He matched Crivelli's dead _Christus_. His sunken eye-pits were of

morbid hue, and the light in his eyes had waned. The angular hollows

and lines of his aged ancestors had succeeded to their reign in his

face twenty years before their time.

'I was ill over there, you know,' he said. 'I am all right now.'

As if, however, to falsify this assertion, his legs seemed to give

way, and he suddenly sat down to save himself from falling. It was

only a slight attack of faintness, resulting from the tedious day's

journey, and the excitement of arrival.

'Has any letter come for me lately?' he asked. 'I received the

last you sent on by the merest chance, and after considerable delay

through being inland; or I might have come sooner.'

'It was from your wife, we supposed?'

'It was.'

Only one other had recently come. They had not sent it on to him,

knowing he would start for home so soon.

He hastily opened the letter produced, and was much disturbed to read

in Tess's handwriting the sentiments expressed in her last hurried

scrawl to him.

O why have you treated me so monstrously, Angel! I do

not deserve it. I have thought it all over carefully,

and I can never, never forgive you! You know that I

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