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    Chapter 24 - Page 2

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    face, if but once more she might set her eyes upon it.

    Her mother's head fell with a sudden jerk, and she roused herself up; and Sylvia put by her thought of the dead, and her craving after his presence, into that receptacle of her heart where all such are kept closed and sacred from the light of common day.

    'Feyther's late,' said Bell.

    'It's gone eight,' replied Sylvia.

    'But our clock is better nor an hour forrard,' answered Bell.

    'Ay, but t' wind brings Monkshaven bells clear to-night. I heerd t' eight o'clock bell ringing not five minutes ago.'

    It was the fire-bell, but she had not distinguished the sound.

    There was another long silence; both wide awake this time.

    'He'll have his rheumatics again,' said Bell.

    'It's cold for sartin,' said Sylvia. 'March weather come afore its time. But I'll make him a treacle-posset, it's a famous thing for keeping off hoasts.'

    The treacle-posset was entertainment enough for both while it was being made. But once placed in a little basin in the oven, there was again time for wonder and anxiety.

    'He said nought about having a bout, did he, mother?' asked Sylvia at length.

    'No,' said Bell, her face a little contracting. After a while she added, 'There's many a one as has husbands that goes off drinking without iver saying a word to their wives. My master is none o' that mak'.'

    'Mother,' broke in Sylvia again, 'I'll just go and get t' lantern out of t' shippen, and go up t' brow, and mebbe to t' ash-field end.'

    'Do, lass,' said her mother. 'I'll get my wraps and go with thee.'

    'Thou shall do niver such a thing,' said Sylvia. 'Thou's too frail to go out i' t' night air such a night as this.'

    'Then call Kester up.'

    'Not I. I'm noane afraid o' t' dark.'

    'But of what thou mayst meet i' t' dark, lass?'

    Sylvia shivered all over at the sudden thought, suggested by this speech of her mother's, that the idea that had flashed into her own mind of going to look for her father might be an answer to the invocation to the Powers which she had made not long ago, that she might indeed meet her dead lover at the ash-field stile; but though she shivered as this superstitious fancy came into her head, her heart beat firm and regular; not from darkness nor from the spirits of the dead was she going to shrink; her great sorrow had taken away all her girlish nervous fear.

    She went; and she came back. Neither man nor spirit had she seen; the wind was blowing on the height enough to sweep all creatures before it; but no one was coming.

    So they sate down again to keep watch. At length his step was heard close to the door; and it startled them even in their state of expectation.

    'Why, feyther!' cried Sylvia as he entered; while his wife stood up trembling, but not saying a word.

    'A'm
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