The Senior Songman 1

Cover The Senior Songman 1
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138 CHAPTER X. • TACOB rose and shook himself. The ^ minster bells were chiming for after- noon prayers.
Ten minutes brought him away from the rosy blossoming willow herbs, from the mists of memory and its useless regrets, to his place behind Dr. Premonay's well-stiff- ened surplice, and there he sang through his part in the service, none knowing how every tone of it came up from a soul which had gone through — nay, was in them now — the depths of sadness and longing. But THE SENIOR SONGMAN. 13
...9 it was the best of Jacob Weird's life that, save the dean, no one did know. For his own family he was a gentle, affectionate, tender-hearted man, pressed down by ill- health and the disappointments of early life.
For outsiders he was a moody enthusiast, with no capacity of good fellowship about him — a sort of hermit crab, only inferior to that creature in that he never outgrew his shell, or had energy enough to change it for another. And, though he knew that they held him as such, he was content.


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