Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from God's Good Man, Vol. 2 of 2: A Simple Love Story
After tea, they te-entered the house at Maryllia's te quest, to hear Cicely play. Arrived in the drawing-room they found the only truly modern thing in it, a grand piano, of that noted French make which as far surpasses the German model as a genuine Straduarius surpasses a child's fiddle put together yesterday, and, taking her seat at this instrument, Cicely had transformed both herself and it into unspeakable enchantment. The thing of wood and wire and ivory keys had become possessed, as it were, with the thunder of the battling clouds and the great rush of the sea, -and then it had suddenly whispered of the sweetness of love and life, till out of storm had grown the tender calm of a ?owing melody, on which wordless dreams of happiness glittered like rainbow bubbles on foam, shin ing for a moment and then vanishing at a breath; it had caught the voices of the rain and wind, - and the patter ing drops and sibilant hurricane had whizzed sharply through the scale of sound till the very notes seemed alive with the wrath of nature, -and then it had rolled all the wild clamour away into a sustained magnificence of prayerful chords which seemed to plead for all things.
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