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    Ch. 1 - The Gift Bestowed - Page 2

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    old, retired part
    of an ancient endowment for students, once a brave edifice, planted
    in an open place, but now the obsolete whim of forgotten
    architects; smoke-age-and-weather-darkened, squeezed on every side
    by the overgrowing of the great city, and choked, like an old well,
    with stones and bricks; its small quadrangles, lying down in very
    pits formed by the streets and buildings, which, in course of time,
    had been constructed above its heavy chimney stalks; its old trees,
    insulted by the neighbouring smoke, which deigned to droop so low
    when it was very feeble and the weather very moody; its grass-
    plots, struggling with the mildewed earth to be grass, or to win
    any show of compromise; its silent pavements, unaccustomed to the
    tread of feet, and even to the observation of eyes, except when a
    stray face looked down from the upper world, wondering what nook it
    was; its sun-dial in a little bricked-up corner, where no sun had
    straggled for a hundred years, but where, in compensation for the
    sun's neglect, the snow would lie for weeks when it lay nowhere
    else, and the black east wind would spin like a huge humming-top,
    when in all other places it was silent and still.

    His dwelling, at its heart and core--within doors--at his fireside-
    -was so lowering and old, so crazy, yet so strong, with its worn-
    eaten beams of wood in the ceiling, and its sturdy floor shelving
    downward to the great oak chimney-piece; so environed and hemmed in
    by the pressure of the town yet so remote in fashion, age, and
    custom; so quiet, yet so thundering with echoes when a distant
    voice was raised or a door was shut,--echoes, not confined to the
    many low passages and empty rooms, but rumbling and grumbling till
    they were stifled in the heavy air of the forgotten Crypt where the
    Norman arches were half-buried in the earth.

    You should have seen him in his dwelling about twilight, in the
    dead winter time.

    When the wind was blowing, shrill and shrewd, with the going down
    of the blurred sun. When it was just so dark, as that the forms of
    things were indistinct and big--but not wholly lost. When sitters
    by the fire began to see wild faces and figures, mountains and

    abysses, ambuscades and armies, in the coals. When people in the
    streets bent down their heads and ran before the weather. When
    those who were obliged to meet it, were stopped at angry corners,
    stung by wandering snow-flakes alighting on the lashes of their
    eyes,--which fell too sparingly, and were blown away too quickly,
    to leave a trace upon the frozen ground. When windows of private
    houses closed up tight and warm. When lighted gas began to burst
    forth in the busy and the quiet streets, fast blackening otherwise.
    When stray pedestrians, shivering
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