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    In Chitterne Churchyard - Page 2

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    better of them; then contrived to meet at one stone which they
    both appeared anxious to examine.

    I had anticipated this, and no sooner were they together than I was
    down on my knees busily pulling the ivy aside from a stone three or
    four yards from theirs, absorbed in my business. They bade each other
    good day and said something about the hot weather, which led one to
    remark that she had found it very trying as she had left home early to
    walk to Salisbury to take the train to Codford, and from there she had
    walked again to Chitterne. Oddly enough, the other old woman had also
    been travelling all day, but from an opposite direction, over Somerset
    way, just to visit Chitterne. It seemed an astonishing thing to them
    when it came out that they had both been looking forward for years to
    this visit, and that it should have been made on the same day, and that
    they should have met there in that same forsaken little graveyard. It
    seemed stranger still when they came to tell why they had made this
    long-desired visit. They were both natives of the village, and had both
    left it early in life, one aged seven, the other ten; they had left
    much about the same time, and had never returned until now. And they
    were now here with the same object--just to find the graves, unmarked
    by a stone, where the mother of one of them, the grandparents of both,
    and other relatives they still remembered had been buried more than
    half a century ago. They were surprised and troubled at their failure
    to identify the very spots where the mounds used to be. "It do all look
    so different," said one, "an' the old stones be mostly gone." Finally,
    when they told their names and their fathers' names--farm-labourers
    both--they failed to remember each other, and could only suppose that
    they must have forgotten many things about their far-off childhood,
    although others were still as well remembered as the incidents of
    yesterday.

    The old dames had become very friendly and confidential by this time.
    "I dare say," I said to myself, "that if I can manage to stay to the
    end I shall see them embrace and kiss at parting," and I also thought
    that their strange meeting in the old village churchyard would be a

    treasured memory for the rest of their lives. I feared they would
    suspect me of eavesdropping, and taking out my penknife, I began
    diligently scraping the dead black moss from the letters on the stone,
    after which I made pretence of copying the illegible inscription in my
    notebook. They, however, took no notice of me, and began telling each
    other what their lives had been since they left Chitterne. Both had
    married working men and had lost their husbands many years ago; one was
    sixty-nine, the other in her
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