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    Chapter 13

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    CHAPTER XIII.

    The news was true. The life--the one fragile life--that had been
    used as a measuring-tape of time by law, was in danger of being
    frayed away. It was the last of a group of lives which had served
    this purpose, at the end of whose breathings the small homestead
    occupied by South himself, the larger one of Giles Winterborne,
    and half a dozen others that had been in the possession of various
    Hintock village families for the previous hundred years, and were
    now Winterborne's, would fall in and become part of the
    encompassing estate.

    Yet a short two months earlier Marty's father, aged fifty-five
    years, though something of a fidgety, anxious being, would have
    been looked on as a man whose existence was so far removed from
    hazardous as any in the parish, and as bidding fair to be
    prolonged for another quarter of a century.

    Winterborne walked up and down his garden next day thinking of the
    contingency. The sense that the paths he was pacing, the cabbage-
    plots, the apple-trees, his dwelling, cider-cellar, wring-house,
    stables, and weathercock, were all slipping away over his head and
    beneath his feet, as if they were painted on a magic-lantern
    slide, was curious. In spite of John South's late indisposition
    he had not anticipated danger. To inquire concerning his health
    had been to show less sympathy than to remain silent, considering
    the material interest he possessed in the woodman's life, and he
    had, accordingly, made a point of avoiding Marty's house.

    While he was here in the garden somebody came to fetch him. It
    was Marty herself, and she showed her distress by her
    unconsciousness of a cropped poll.

    "Father is still so much troubled in his mind about that tree,"
    she said. "You know the tree I mean, Mr. Winterborne? the tall
    one in front of the house, that he thinks will blow down and kill
    us. Can you come and see if you can persuade him out of his
    notion? I can do nothing."

    He accompanied her to the cottage, and she conducted him up-
    stairs. John South was pillowed up in a chair between the bed and
    the window exactly opposite the latter, towards which his face was
    turned.


    "Ah, neighbor Winterborne," he said. "I wouldn't have minded if
    my life had only been my own to lose; I don't vallie it in much of
    itself, and can let it go if 'tis required of me. But to think
    what 'tis worth to you, a young man rising in life, that do
    trouble me! It seems a trick of dishonesty towards ye to go off at
    fifty-five! I could bear up, I know I could, if it were not for
    the tree--yes, the tree, 'tis that's killing me. There he stands,
    threatening my life every minute that the wind do blow. He'll
    come down upon us and squat us dead; and what will ye do when
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