Page:The Finer Grain (London, Methuen & Co., 1910).djvu/59

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MORA MONTRAVERS

I

They were such extraordinary people to have been so odiously stricken, that poor Traffle himself, always, at the best—though it was indeed just now at the worst—what his wife called horribly philosophic, fairly grimaced back, in private, at so flagrant a show of the famous, the provokedly vicious, "irony," the thing he had so often read about in clever stories, with which the usually candid countenance of their fate seemed to have begun of a sudden to bristle, Ah, that irony of fate, often admired by him as a phrase and recognised as a truth—so that, if he himself ever wrote a story it should certainly and most strikingly be about that,—he fairly saw it leer at them now, could quite positively fancy it guilty of a low wink at them, in their trouble, out of that vast visage of the world that was made up for them of the separate stony stares or sympathising smirks, presented by the circle of their friends. When he could get away from Jane he would pause in his worried walk about the house or the garden, always, since he could now seldom leave her to brood alone for longer than that,—and, while he shook his

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