About ten miles north-east of Eastthorpe lies the town of Fenmarket,

very like Eastthorpe generally; and as we are already familiar with

Eastthorpe, a particular description of Fenmarket is unnecessary.

There is, however, one marked difference between them. Eastthorpe,

it will be remembered, is on the border between the low uplands and

the Fens, and has one side open to soft, swelling hills.

Fenmarket is entirely in the Fens, and all the roads that lead out of it are

alike level, monotonous, straight, and flanked by deep and stagnant

ditches. The river, also, here is broader and slower; more reluctant

than it is even at Eastthorpe to hasten its journey to the inevitable

sea. During the greater part of the year the visitor to Fenmarket

would perhaps find it dull and depressing, and at times, under a

grey, wintry sky, almost unendurable; but nevertheless, for days and

weeks it has a charm possessed by few other landscapes in England,

provided only that behind the eye which looks there is something to

which a landscape of that peculiar character answers. There is, for

example, the wide, dome-like expanse of the sky, there is the

distance, there is the freedom and there are the stars on a clear

night. The orderly, geometrical march of the constellations from the

extreme eastern horizon across the meridian and down to the west has

a solemn majesty, which is only partially discernible when their

course is interrupted by broken country.

On a dark afternoon in November 1844, two young women, Clara and

Madge Hopgood, were playing chess in the back parlour of their

mother's house at Fenmarket, just before tea. Clara, the elder, was

about five-and-twenty, fair, with rather light hair worn flat at the

side of her face, after the fashion of that time. Her features were

tolerably regular. It is true they were somewhat marred by an uneven

nasal outline, but this was redeemed by the curved lips of a mouth

which was small and rather compressed, and by a definite, symmetrical

and graceful figure. Her eyes were grey, with a curious peculiarity

in them. Ordinarily they were steady, strong eyes, excellent and

renowned optical instruments. Over and over again she had detected,

along the stretch of the Eastthorpe road, approaching visitors, and

had named them when her companions could see nothing but specks.

Occasionally, however, these steady, strong, grey eyes utterly

changed. They were the same eyes, the same colour, but they ceased

to be mere optical instruments and became instruments of expression,

transmissive of radiance to such a degree that the light which was

reflected from them seemed insufficient to account for it. It was

also curious that this change, though it must have been accompanied

by some emotion, was just as often not attended by any other sign of

it. Clara was, in fact, little given to any display of feeling.




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