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Felix Holt the Radical

Chapter 4 

Word Count: 3027    |    Released on: 18/11/2017

painful preac

ck ribbon that tied his knee-breeches. He was walking about now, with his hands clasped behind him, an attitude in which his body seemed to bear about the same proportion to his head as the lower part of a stone Hermes bears to the carven image that crowns it. His face looked old and worn, yet the curtain of hair that fell from his bald crown and hung about his neck retained much of its original auburn tint, and his large, brown, shortsighted eyes were still clear and bright. At the first glance, every one thought him a very odd-looking rusty old man; the freeschool boys often hooted after him, and called him 'Revelations'; and to many respectable church people, old Lyon's little legs and large head seemed to make Dissent additionally preposterous. But he was too shortsighted to notice those who tittered at him - too absent from the

said', and 'Who said it'; but these were growing into a many-branched discourse, and the preacher's eyes dilated, and a smile played about his mouth till, as his manner was, when he felt

ther all the listeners of earth and heaven - if every Christian of you peeps round to see what his neighbours in good coats are doing, or else puts his hat before his face that he may shout and never be heard? But this is what you do: when the servant of God stands up to deliver his message, do you l

d to say, in a tone of despondency, finishing with a groan, 'Here is Mrs Holt w

and beg of you not to groan. It is a stumbling-block and offence to my daughter; she would take no broth yesterday, because she said you had cried into it. Thus you cause

hinder poor dear Miss Esther from speakin

Lyddy, but send up

d the door

track of my meditations, and take me often unawares. Mistress Holt is another who darkens counsel by words without knowledge, and angers th

black band over her forehead. She moved the chair a little and seated herself in it with some emphasis, looking fixedly at the opposite wall with a hurt and argumentative expressio

your mind, Mistress H

sir, else I sh

k fre

r in Malthouse Yard long before you began to be pastor of it, which was seven year ago last Mich

ly, it i

judge of your gifts as Mr Nuttwood and Mr Muscat, though whether he'd have agreed with some tha

to speak about?' said the mini

to ask 'em, not believing my words; and he believed himself that the receipt for the Cancer Cure, which I've sent out in bottles till this very last April before September as now

at Mr Lyon had been successfully confu

?' said Mr Lyon, with a slight initiative towards th

h no trade or fortune but what he'd got in his head. But my husband's tongue 'ud have been a fortune to anybody, and there was many a one said it was as good as a dose of physic to hear him talk; not but what that got him into tr

the things whereby we may edify one another. Let me beg

eat to make broth for a sick neighbour: and if there's any of the church members say they've done the same, I'd ask them if they had the sinking at the stomach as I have; for I've ever strove to do the right thing, and more, for good-natured I always was; and I little thought, after being respected by everybody, I should come to be reproached by my own son. And my husband said, when he was a-dying - "Mary," he said, "the elixir, and the pills, an

vity of the lachrymal gland; nevertheless her eyes had become moist, her fingers played on her knee in an agitated manner, and she finally plucked a bit of her

ress Holt, that your son has objected in some wa

gow, and getting through all the bit of money his father saved for his bringing-up - what has all his learning come to? He says I'd better never open my Bible, for it's as bad poison to me as the pills are to half the people as swallow 'em. You'll not speak of this again, Mr Lyon - I don't think ill enoug

word of God has to satisfy the larger needs of His people, like the rain and the sunshine - which no man must think to be meant for his own patch of seed-groun

itan - he uses dreadful language, Mr Lyon; but I saw he didn't mean you ill, for all that. He calls most folks' religion rottenness; and yet another time he'll tell me I ought to feel myself a sinner, and do God's will and not my own. But it's my belief he says f

rd did not seem to him to be altogether dreadful. 'Meanwhile, my friend, I counsel you to send up a supplication, which I shall not fail to offer also, that you may receive a spirit of humility an

I haven't told you all. He's made himself a journeyman to Mr Prowd the watchmaker - after all this learning - and he says he'll go with patches on his knees, and he shall l

ing of grace within him. We must not judge rashly. Many

gone through with those medicines - the pounding, and the pouring, and the letting stand, and the weighing - up early and down late - there's nobody knows yet but One that's worthy to know; and the pasting o' the printed labels right side upwards. There's few women would have gone through with it; and it's reasonable to think it'll be made up to me; for if there's promised and p

l. I pray that a more powerful te

uch-tried Rufus walked about a

tch for. 'Tis true that even Sara, the chosen mother of God's people, showed a spirit of unbelief, and perhaps of selfish anger; and it is a passage that bears th

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