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    Chapter 10 - Page 2

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    this troublesome ornament with far more attention than he
    listened to her father. It seemed as if it fascinated him to see
    her push it up impatiently, until it tightened her soft flesh;
    and then to mark the loosening--the fall. He could almost have
    exclaimed--'There it goes, again!' There was so little left to be
    done after he arrived at the preparation for tea, that he was
    almost sorry the obligation of eating and drinking came so soon
    to prevent his watching Margaret. She handed him his cup of tea
    with the proud air of an unwilling slave; but her eye caught the
    moment when he was ready for another cup; and he almost longed to
    ask her to do for him what he saw her compelled to do for her
    father, who took her little finger and thumb in his masculine
    hand, and made them serve as sugar-tongs. Mr. Thornton saw her
    beautiful eyes lifted to her father, full of light, half-laughter
    and half-love, as this bit of pantomime went on between the two,
    unobserved, as they fancied, by any. Margaret's head still ached,
    as the paleness of her complexion, and her silence might have
    testified; but she was resolved to throw herself into the breach,
    if there was any long untoward pause, rather than that her
    father's friend, pupil, and guest should have cause to think
    himself in any way neglected. But the conversation went on; and
    Margaret drew into a corner, near her mother, with her work,
    after the tea-things were taken away; and felt that she might let
    her thoughts roam, without fear of being suddenly wanted to fill
    up a gap.

    Mr. Thornton and Mr. Hale were both absorbed in the continuation
    of some subject which had been started at their last meeting.
    Margaret was recalled to a sense of the present by some trivial,
    low-spoken remark of her mother's; and on suddenly looking up
    from her work, her eye was caught by the difference of outward
    appearance between her father and Mr. Thornton, as betokening
    such distinctly opposite natures. Her father was of slight
    figure, which made him appear taller than he really was, when not
    contrasted, as at this time, with the tall, massive frame of
    another. The lines in her father's face were soft and waving,
    with a frequent undulating kind of trembling movement passing

    over them, showing every fluctuating emotion; the eyelids were
    large and arched, giving to the eyes a peculiar languid beauty
    which was almost feminine. The brows were finely arched, but
    were, by the very size of the dreamy lids, raised to a
    considerable distance from the eyes. Now, in Mr. Thornton's face
    the straight brows fell low over the clear, deep-set earnest
    eyes, which, without being unpleasantly sharp, seemed intent
    enough to penetrate into the very heart and core of what he was
    looking
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