It was the afternoon of an April day in that same year, and the sky

was blue above, with little sailing white clouds catching the

pleasant sunlight. The earth in that northern country had scarcely

yet put on her robe of green. The few trees grew near brooks running

down from the moors and the higher ground. The air was full of

pleasant sounds prophesying of the coming summer. The rush, and

murmur, and tinkle of the hidden watercourses; the song of the lark

poised high up in the sunny air; the bleat of the lambs calling to

their mothers--everything inanimate was full of hope and gladness.

For the first time for a mournful month the front door of

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Haytersbank Farm was open; the warm spring air might enter, and

displace the sad dark gloom, if it could. There was a newly-lighted

fire in the unused grate; and Kester was in the kitchen, with his

clogs off his feet, so as not to dirty the spotless floor, stirring

here and there, and trying in his awkward way to make things look

home-like and cheerful. He had brought in some wild daffodils which

he had been to seek in the dawn, and he placed them in a jug on the

dresser. Dolly Reid, the woman who had come to help Sylvia during

her mother's illness a year ago, was attending to something in the

back-kitchen, making a noise among the milk-cans, and singing a

ballad to herself as she worked; yet every now and then she checked

herself in her singing, as if a sudden recollection came upon her

that this was neither the time nor the place for songs. Once or

twice she took up the funeral psalm which is sung by the bearers of

the body in that country-Our God, our help in ages past.

But it was of no use: the pleasant April weather out of doors, and

perhaps the natural spring in the body, disposed her nature to

cheerfulness, and insensibly she returned to her old ditty.

Kester was turning over many things in his rude honest mind as he

stood there, giving his finishing touches every now and then to the

aspect of the house-place, in preparation for the return of the

widow and daughter of his old master.

It was a month and more since they had left home; more than a

fortnight since Kester, with three halfpence in his pocket, had set

out after his day's work to go to York--to walk all night long, and

to wish Daniel Robson his last farewell.

Daniel had tried to keep up and had brought out one or two familiar,

thread-bare, well-worn jokes, such as he had made Kester chuckle

over many a time and oft, when the two had been together afield or

in the shippen at the home which he should never more see. But no

'Old Grouse in the gunroom' could make Kester smile, or do anything

except groan in but a heart-broken sort of fashion, and presently

the talk had become more suitable to the occasion, Daniel being up

to the last the more composed of the two; for Kester, when turned

out of the condemned cell, fairly broke down into the heavy sobbing

he had never thought to sob again on earth. He had left Bell and

Sylvia in their lodging at York, under Philip's care; he dared not

go to see them; he could not trust himself; he had sent them his

duty, and bade Philip tell Sylvia that the game-hen had brought out

fifteen chickens at a hatch.




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