"You must try to call her Mrs. Caradoc Wynne now, Shoni," said the

Vicar, with a smile.

"Yes, indeed, sir," said Shoni, quickly thawing; "there's nobody in

Abersethin but won't be glad to see Val--Mrs. Wynne home again; it bin

very dull here without her, ever since she gone away."

Meanwhile Mrs. Wynne had knocked at the door and had been confronted by

Essec Powell himself, who presented such an extraordinary appearance

that she had some difficulty in composing her face to a proper degree

of gravity. His trousers of brown cloth, burnt at the knees into a

green hue, were turned up above each ankle, exhibiting his blue woollen

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stockings and a tattered pair of black cloth shoes, his coat was of

black cloth, very much frayed at the collar and cuffs, his white hair

flew about in all directions, as the draught from the back door swirled

in when the front door was opened. He had his finger in the leaves of

an old book, and with a far-away look in his blue eyes, all he could

say was a bewildered, "Eh!"

"The Vicar is coming to see you, Mr. Powell--"

"What Vicar? What, the 'Vicare du'?" and at this moment the Vicar

appeared, and held out his hand.

Essec Powell stared in astonishment, and carefully exchanging his book

from his right to his left hand, and glancing to see that his finger

was on the right passage, he rather ungraciously shook hands with his

visitor.

"Well," he said, "there's a thing I never thought I would do in this

world."

"Oh, well, come," said Lewis Wynne's jovial voice. "You meant to do it

in the next world evidently, so we may as well begin here."

"Will you come in?" and the old man awkwardly ushered them into the

little back parlour, which Valmai's busy fingers had transformed from

its original bareness into a cosy home-room.

"Oh, what a dear little room," said Mrs. Wynne as she entered.

The table was littered with books and papers, a gleam of sunlight

shining through the crimson curtains giving a warm glow to the whole

room.

"Yes," said Essec Powell, looking round with the air of a stranger, "it

has nice bookshelves, and a nice light for reading; but I miss that

girl shocking, shocking," he repeated; "got to look out for every

passage now, and I was used to her somehow, you see; and I haven't got

anybody else, and I wish in my heart she would come back again."

"That, I am afraid," said the Vicar, "can never be; perhaps both you

and I, Mr. Powell, have forgotten too much that, while we are going

down the stream of life, the young people are going up, and are

building their own hopes and interests; and I called to-day to see

whether we could not agree--you and I--to think more of the young

people's happiness for the future, and less of our own ease or our own

sorrows."




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