'I don't think Hester Rose has any thought of matrimony.' 'To be sure not; it is for thee, or for William Coulson, to make her

think. She, may-be, remembers enough of her mother's life with her

father to make her slow to think on such things. But it's in her to

think on matrimony; it's in all of us.' 'Alice's husband was dead before I knew her,' said Philip, rather

evading the main subject.

'It was a mercy when he were taken. A mercy to them who were left, I

mean. Alice was a bonny young woman, with a smile for everybody,

when he wed her--a smile for every one except our John, who never

could do enough to try and win one from her. But, no! she would have

none of him, but set her heart on Jack Rose, a sailor in a

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whale-ship. And so they were married at last, though all her own

folks were against it. And he was a profligate sinner, and went

after other women, and drank, and beat her. She turned as stiff and

as grey as thou seest her now within a year of Hester's birth. I

believe they'd have perished for want and cold many a time if it had

not been for John. If she ever guessed where the money came from, it

must have hurt her pride above a bit, for she was always a proud

woman. But mother's love is stronger than pride.' Philip fell to thinking; a generation ago something of the same kind

had been going on as that which he was now living through, quick

with hopes and fears. A girl beloved by two--nay, those two so

identical in occupation as he and Kinraid were--Rose identical even

in character with what he knew of the specksioneer; a girl choosing

the wrong lover, and suffering and soured all her life in

consequence of her youth's mistake; was that to be Sylvia's

lot?--or, rather, was she not saved from it by the event of the

impressment, and by the course of silence he himself had resolved

upon? Then he went on to wonder if the lives of one generation were

but a repetition of the lives of those who had gone before, with no

variation but from the internal cause that some had greater capacity

for suffering than others. Would those very circumstances which made

the interest of his life now, return, in due cycle, when he was dead

and Sylvia was forgotten?

Perplexed thoughts of this and a similar kind kept returning into

Philip's mind whenever he had leisure to give himself up to

consideration of anything but the immediate throng of business. And

every time he dwelt on this complication and succession of similar

events, he emerged from his reverie more and more satisfied with the

course he had taken in withholding from Sylvia all knowledge of her

lover's fate.




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