'Isn't he gone yet?' said she. 'I cannot abide him; I could ha'

pinched father when he asked him for t' come in.' 'Maybe, he'll not stay long,' said Philip, hardly understanding the

meaning of what he said, so sweet was it to have her making her

whispered confidences to him.

But Simpson was not going to let her alone in the dark corner

between the door and the window. He began paying her some coarse

country compliments--too strong in their direct flattery for even

her father's taste, more especially as he saw by his wife's set lips

and frowning brow how much she disapproved of their visitor's style

of conversation.

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'Come, measter, leave t' lass alone; she's set up enough a'ready,

her mother makes such a deal on her. Yo' an' me's men for sensible

talk at our time o' life. An', as I was saying, t' horse was a

weaver if iver one was, as any one could ha' told as had come within

a mile on him.' And in this way the old farmer and the bluff butcher chatted on

about horses, while Philip and Sylvia sate together, he turning over

all manner of hopes and projects for the future, in spite of his

aunt's opinion that he was too 'old-fashioned' for her dainty,

blooming daughter. Perhaps, too, Mrs. Robson saw some reason for

changing her mind on this head as she watched Sylvia this night, for

she accompanied Philip to the door, when the time came for him to

start homewards, and bade him 'good-night' with unusual fervour,

adding-'Thou'st been a deal o' comfort to me, lad--a'most as one as if thou

wert a child o' my own, as at times I could welly think thou art to

be. Anyways, I trust to thee to look after the lile lass, as has no

brother to guide her among men--and men's very kittle for a woman to

deal wi; but if thou'lt have an eye on whom she consorts wi', my

mind 'll be easier.' Philip's heart beat fast, but his voice was as calm as usual when he

replied-'I'd just keep her a bit aloof from Monkshaven folks; a lass is

always the more thought on for being chary of herself; and as for t'

rest, I'll have an eye to the folks she goes among, and if I see

that they don't befit her, I'll just give her a warning, for she's

not one to like such chaps as yon Simpson there; she can see what's

becoming in a man to say to a lass, and what's not.' Philip set out on his two-mile walk home with a tumult of happiness

in his heart. He was not often carried away by delusions of his own

creating; to-night he thought he had good ground for believing that

by patient self-restraint he might win Sylvia's love. A year ago he

had nearly earned her dislike by obtruding upon her looks and words

betokening his passionate love. He alarmed her girlish coyness, as

well as wearied her with the wish he had then felt that she should

take an interest in his pursuits. But, with unusual wisdom, he had

perceived his mistake; it was many months now since he had betrayed,

by word or look, that she was anything more to him than a little

cousin to be cared for and protected when need was. The consequence

was that she had become tamed, just as a wild animal is tamed; he

had remained tranquil and impassive, almost as if he did not

perceive her shy advances towards friendliness. These advances were

made by her after the lessons had ceased. She was afraid lest he was

displeased with her behaviour in rejecting his instructions, and was

not easy till she was at peace with him; and now, to all appearance,

he and she were perfect friends, but nothing more. In his absence

she would not allow her young companions to laugh at his grave

sobriety of character, and somewhat prim demeanour; she would even

go against her conscience, and deny that she perceived any

peculiarity. When she wanted it, she sought his advice on such small

subjects as came up in her daily life; and she tried not to show

signs of weariness when he used more words--and more difficult

words--than were necessary to convey his ideas. But her ideal

husband was different from Philip in every point, the two images

never for an instant merged into one. To Philip she was the only

woman in the world; it was the one subject on which he dared not

consider, for fear that both conscience and judgment should decide

against him, and that he should be convinced against his will that

she was an unfit mate for him, that she never would be his, and that

it was waste of time and life to keep her shrined in the dearest

sanctuary of his being, to the exclusion of all the serious and

religious aims which, in any other case, he would have been the

first to acknowledge as the object he ought to pursue. For he had

been brought up among the Quakers, and shared in their austere

distrust of a self-seeking spirit; yet what else but self-seeking

was his passionate prayer, 'Give me Sylvia, or else, I die?' No

other vision had ever crossed his masculine fancy for a moment; his

was a rare and constant love that deserved a better fate than it met

with. At this time his hopes were high, as I have said, not merely

as to the growth of Sylvia's feelings towards him, but as to the

probability of his soon being in a position to place her in such

comfort, as his wife, as she had never enjoyed before.




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