People speak of the way in which harp-playing sets off a graceful

figure; spinning is almost as becoming an employment. A woman stands

at the great wool-wheel, one arm extended, the other holding the

thread, her head thrown back to take in all the scope of her

occupation; or if it is the lesser spinning-wheel for flax--and it

was this that Sylvia moved forwards to-night--the pretty sound of

the buzzing, whirring motion, the attitude of the spinner, foot and

hand alike engaged in the business--the bunch of gay coloured

ribbon that ties the bundle of flax on the rock--all make it into a

picturesque piece of domestic business that may rival harp-playing

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any day for the amount of softness and grace which it calls out.

Sylvia's cheeks were rather flushed by the warmth of the room after

the frosty air. The blue ribbon with which she had thought it

necessary to tie back her hair before putting on her hat to go to

market had got rather loose, and allowed her disarranged curls to

stray in a manner which would have annoyed her extremely, if she had

been upstairs to look at herself in the glass; but although they

were not set in the exact fashion which Sylvia esteemed as correct,

they looked very pretty and luxuriant. Her little foot, placed on

the 'traddle', was still encased in its smartly buckled shoe--not

slightly to her discomfort, as she was unaccustomed to be shod in

walking far; only as Philip had accompanied them home, neither she

nor Molly had liked to go barefoot. Her round mottled arm and ruddy

taper hand drew out the flax with nimble, agile motion, keeping time

to the movement of the wheel. All this Philip could see; the greater

part of her face was lost to him as she half averted it, with a shy

dislike to the way in which she knew from past experience that

cousin Philip always stared at her. And avert it as she would she

heard with silent petulance the harsh screech of Philip's chair as

he heavily dragged it on the stone floor, sitting on it all the

while, and felt that he was moving round so as to look at her as

much as was in his power, without absolutely turning his back on

either her father or mother. She got herself ready for the first

opportunity of contradiction or opposition.

'Well, wench! and has ta bought this grand new cloak?' 'Yes, feyther. It's a scarlet one.' 'Ay, ay! and what does mother say?' 'Oh, mother's content,' said Sylvia, a little doubting in her heart,

but determined to defy Philip at all hazards.

'Mother 'll put up with it if it does na spot would be nearer fact,

I'm thinking,' said Bell, quietly.

'I wanted Sylvia to take the gray,' said Philip.




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