Page:The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (emended first edition), Volume 3.djvu/316

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
306
THE TENANT

with his umbrella to the wide fields on the right, conspicuous for their compact hedgerows, deep, well-cut ditches, and fine timber-trees, growing sometimes on the borders, sometimes in the midst of the enclosure;—"very fine land, if you saw it in the summer or spring."

"Ay," responded the other—a gruff elderly man, with a drab great coat buttoned up to the chin and a cotton umbrella between his knees. "It's old Maxwell's I suppose."

"It was his, sir, but he's dead now, you're aware, and has left it all to his niece."

"All!"

"Every rood of it,—and the mansion-house and all,—every hatom of his worldly goods!—except just a trifle, by way of remembrance to his nephew down in ——shire and an annuity to his wife."

"It's strange, sir!"

"It is sir. And she wasn't his own niece neither; but he had no near relations of his