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    Chapter 10

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    CHAPTER X.

    Supper-time came, and with it the hot-baked from the oven, laid on
    a snowy cloth fresh from the press, and reticulated with folds, as
    in Flemish "Last Suppers." Creedle and the boy fetched and
    carried with amazing alacrity, the latter, to mollify his superior
    and make things pleasant, expressing his admiration of Creedle's
    cleverness when they were alone.

    "I s'pose the time when you learned all these knowing things, Mr.
    Creedle, was when you was in the militia?"

    "Well, yes. I seed the world at that time somewhat, certainly,
    and many ways of strange dashing life. Not but that Giles has
    worked hard in helping me to bring things to such perfection to-
    day. 'Giles,' says I, though he's maister. Not that I should
    call'n maister by rights, for his father growed up side by side
    with me, as if one mother had twinned us and been our nourishing."

    "I s'pose your memory can reach a long way back into history, Mr.
    Creedle?"

    "Oh yes. Ancient days, when there was battles and famines and
    hang-fairs and other pomps, seem to me as yesterday. Ah, many's
    the patriarch I've seed come and go in this parish! There, he's
    calling for more plates. Lord, why can't 'em turn their plates
    bottom upward for pudding, as they used to do in former days?"

    Meanwhile, in the adjoining room Giles was presiding in a half-
    unconscious state. He could not get over the initial failures in
    his scheme for advancing his suit, and hence he did not know that
    he was eating mouthfuls of bread and nothing else, and continually
    snuffing the two candles next him till he had reduced them to mere
    glimmers drowned in their own grease. Creedle now appeared with a
    specially prepared dish, which he served by elevating the little
    three-legged pot that contained it, and tilting the contents into
    a dish, exclaiming, simultaneously, "Draw back, gentlemen and
    ladies, please!"

    A splash followed. Grace gave a quick, involuntary nod and blink,
    and put her handkerchief to her face.

    "Good heavens! what did you do that for, Creedle?" said Giles,
    sternly, and jumping up.

    "'Tis how I do it when they baint here, maister," mildly
    expostulated Creedle, in an aside audible to all the company.

    "Well, yes--but--" replied Giles. He went over to Grace, and
    hoped none of it had gone into her eye.

    "Oh no," she said. "Only a sprinkle on my face. It was nothing."

    "Kiss it and make it well," gallantly observed Mr. Bawtree.

    Miss Melbury blushed.

    The timber-merchant said, quickly, "Oh, it is nothing! She must
    bear these little mishaps." But there could be discerned in his
    face something which said "I ought to have foreseen this."

    Giles himself, since the untoward beginning
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