<p><SPAN name="c64" id="c64"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER LXIV.</h3>
<h3>The Rocks and Valleys.<br/> </h3>
<p>During these days Mrs. Greenow was mistress of the old Hall down in
Westmoreland, and was nursing Kate assiduously through the calamity
of her broken arm. There had come to be a considerable amount of
confidence between the aunt and the niece. Kate had acknowledged to
her aunt that her brother had behaved badly,—very badly; and the
aunt had confessed to the niece that she regarded Captain Bellfield
as a fit subject for compassion.</p>
<p>"And he was violent to you, and broke your arm? I always knew it was
so," Mrs. Greenow had said, speaking with reference to her nephew. But
this Kate had denied. "No," said she; "that was an accident. When he
went away and left me, he knew nothing about it. And if he had broken
both my arms I should not have cared much. I could have forgiven him
that." But that which Kate could not forgive him was the fault which
she had herself committed. For his sake she had done her best to
separate Alice and John Grey, and George had shown himself to be
unworthy of the kindness of her treachery. "I would give all I have
in the world to bring them together again," Kate said. "They'll come
together fast enough if they like each other," said Mrs. Greenow.
"Alice is young still, and they tell me she's as good looking as
ever. A girl with her money won't have far to seek for a husband,
even if this paragon from Cambridgeshire should not turn up again."</p>
<p>"You don't know Alice, aunt."</p>
<p>"No, I don't. But I know what young women are, and I know what young
men are. All this nonsense about her cousin George,—what difference
will it make? A man like Mr. Grey won't care about that,—especially
not if she tells him all about it. My belief is that a girl can have
anything forgiven her, if she'll only tell it herself."</p>
<p>But Kate preferred the other subject, and so, I think, did Mrs.
Greenow herself. "Of course, my dear," she would say, "marriage with
me, if I should marry again, would be a very different thing to your
marriage, or that of any other young person. As for love, that has
been all over for me since poor Greenow died. I have known nothing of
the softness of affection since I laid him in his cold grave, and
never can again. 'Captain Bellfield,' I said to him, 'if you were to
kneel at my feet for years, it would not make me care for you in the
way of love.'"</p>
<p>"And what did he say to that?"</p>
<p>"How am I to tell you what he said? He talked nonsense about my
beauty, as all the men do. If a woman were hump-backed, and had only
one eye, they wouldn't be ashamed to tell her she was a Venus."</p>
<p>"But, aunt, you are a handsome woman, you know."</p>
<p>"Laws, my dear, as if I didn't understand all about it; as if I
didn't know what makes a woman run after? It isn't beauty,—and it
isn't money altogether. I've seen women who had plenty of both, and
not a man would come nigh them. They didn't dare. There are some of
them, a man would as soon think of putting his arm round a poplar
tree, they are so hard and so stiff. You know you're a little that
way yourself, Kate, and I've always told you it won't do."</p>
<p>"I'm afraid I'm too old to mend, aunt."</p>
<p>"Not at all, if you'll only set your wits to work and try. You've
plenty of money now, and you're good-looking enough, too, when you
take the trouble to get yourself up. But, as I said before, it isn't
that that's wanted. There's a stand-off about some women,—what the
men call a 'nollimy tangere,' that a man must be quite a furious
Orlando to attempt to get the better of it. They look as though
matrimony itself were improper, and as if they believed that little
babies were found about in the hedges and ditches. They talk of women
being forward! There are some of them a deal too backward, according
to my way of thinking."</p>
<p>"Yours is a comfortable doctrine, aunt."</p>
<p>"That's just what I want it to be. I want things to be comfortable.
Why shouldn't things be nice about one when one's got the means?
Nobody can say it's a pleasant thing to live alone. I always thought
that man in the song hit it off properly. You remember what he says?
'The poker and tongs to each other belongs.' So they do, and that
should be the way with men and women."</p>
<p>"But the poker and tongs have but a bad life of it sometimes."</p>
<p>"Not so often as the people say, my dear. Men and women ain't like
lumps of sugar. They don't melt because the water is sometimes warm.
Now, if I do take Bellfield,—and I really think I shall; but if I do
he'll give me a deal of trouble. I know he will. He'll always be
wanting my money, and, of course, he'll get more than he ought. I'm
not a Solomon, nor yet a Queen of Sheba, no more than anybody else.
And he'll smoke too many cigars, and perhaps drink more
brandy-and-water than he ought. And he'll be making eyes, too, at
some of the girls who'll be fools enough to let him."</p>
<p>"Dear me, aunt, if I thought all that ill of him, I'm sure I wouldn't
marry him;—especially as you say you don't love him."</p>
<p>"As for love, my dear, that's gone,—clear gone!" Whereupon Mrs.
Greenow put up her handkerchief to her eyes. "Some women can love
twice, but I am not one of them. I wish I could,—I wish I could!"
These last words were spoken in a tone of solemn regret, which,
however, she contrived to change as quickly as she had adopted it.
"But my dear, marriage is a comfortable thing. And then, though the
Captain may be a little free, I don't doubt but what I shall get the
upper hand with him at last. I shan't stop his cigars and
brandy-and-water you know. Why shouldn't a man smoke and have a
glass, if he don't make a beast of himself? I like to see a man enjoy
himself. And then," she added, speaking tenderly of her absent lover,
"I do think he's fond of me,—I do, indeed."</p>
<p>"So is Mr. Cheesacre for the matter of that."</p>
<p>"Poor Cheesy! I believe he was, though he did talk so much about
money. I always like to believe the best I can of them. But then
there was no poetry about Cheesy. I don't care about saying it now,
as you've quite made up your mind not to have him."</p>
<p>"Quite, aunt."</p>
<p>"Your grandfather's will does make a difference, you know. But, as I
was saying, I do like a little romance about them,—just a sniff, as
I call it, of the rocks and valleys. One knows that it doesn't mean
much; but it's like artificial flowers,—it gives a little colour,
and takes off the dowdiness. Of course, bread-and-cheese is the real
thing. The rocks and valleys are no good at all, if you haven't got
that, But enough is as good as a feast. Thanks to dear
Greenow,"—here the handkerchief was again used—"Thanks to dear
Greenow, I shall never want. Of course I shan't let any of the money
go into his hands,—the Captain's, I mean. I know a trick worth two
of that, my dear. But, lord love you! I've enough for him and me.
What's the good of a woman's wanting to keep it all to herself?"</p>
<ANTIMG src="images/ill64-t.jpg" height-obs="500" alt="A sniff of the rocks and valleys." />
<p>"And you think you'll really take him, aunt, and pay his
washerwoman's bills for him? You remember what you told me when I
first saw him?"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes; I remember. And if he can't pay his own washerwoman, isn't
that so much more of a reason that I should do it for him? Well; yes;
I think I will take him. That is, if he lets me take him just as I
choose. Beggars mustn't be choosers, my dear."</p>
<p>In this way the aunt and niece became very confidential, and Mrs.
Greenow whispered into Kate's ears her belief that Captain Bellfield
might possibly make his way across the country to Westmoreland.
"There would be no harm in offering him a bed, would there?" Mrs.
Greenow asked. "You see the inn at Shap is a long way off for morning
calls." Kate could not take upon herself to say that there would be
any harm, but she did not like the idea of having Captain Bellfield
as a visitor. "After all, perhaps he mayn't come," said the widow. "I
don't see where he is to raise the money for such a journey, now that
he has quarrelled with Mr. Cheesacre."</p>
<p>"If Captain Bellfield must come to Vavasor Hall, at any rate let him
not come till Alice's visit had been completed." That was Kate's
present wish, and so much she ventured to confide to her aunt. But
there seemed to be no way of stopping him. "I don't in the least know
where he is, my dear, and as for writing to him, I never did such a
thing in my life, and I shouldn't know how to begin." Mrs. Greenow
declared that she had not positively invited the Captain; but on this
point Kate hardly gave full credit to her aunt's statement.</p>
<p>Alice arrived, and, for a day or two, the three ladies lived very
pleasantly together. Kate still wore her arm in a sling; but she was
able to walk out, and would take long walks in spite of the doctor's
prohibition. Of course, they went up on the mountains. Indeed, all
the walks from Vavasor Hall led to the mountains, unless one chose to
take the road to Shap. But they went up, across the beacon hill, as
though by mutual consent. There were no questions asked between them
as to the route to be taken; and though they did not reach the stone
on which they had once sat looking over upon Haweswater, they did
reach the spot upon which Kate had encountered her accident. "It was
here I fell," she said; "and the last I saw of him was his back, as
he made his way down into the valley, there. When I got upon my legs
I could still see him. It was one of those evenings when the clouds
are dark, but you can see all objects with a peculiar clearness
through the air. I stood here ever so long, holding my arm, and
watching him; but he never once turned to look back at me. Do you
know, Alice, I fancy that I shall never see him again."</p>
<p>"Do you suppose that he means to quarrel with you altogether?"</p>
<p>"I can hardly tell you what I mean! He seemed to me to be going away
from me, as though he went into another world. His figure against the
light was quite clear, and he walked quickly, and on he went, till
the slope of the hill hid him from me. Of course, I thought that he
would return to the Hall. At one time I almost feared that he would
come upon me through the woods, as I went back myself. But yet, I had
a feeling,—what people call a presentiment, that I should never see
him again."</p>
<p>"He has never written?"</p>
<p>"No; not a word. You must remember that he did not know that I had
hurt myself. I am sure he will not write, and I am sure, also, that I
shall not. If he wanted money I would send it to him, but I would not
write to him."</p>
<p>"I fear he will always want money, Kate."</p>
<p>"I fear he will. If you could know what I suffered when he made me
write that letter to you! But, of course, I was a beast. Of course, I
ought not to have written it."</p>
<p>"I thought it a very proper letter."</p>
<p>"It was a mean letter. The whole thing was mean! He should have
starved in the street before he had taken your money. He should have
given up Parliament, and everything else! I had doubted much about
him before, but it was that which first turned my heart against him.
I had begun to fear that he was not such a man as I had always
thought him,—as I had spoken of him to you."</p>
<p>"I had judged of him for myself," said Alice.</p>
<p>"Of course you did. But I had endeavoured to make you judge kindly.
Alice, dear! we have both suffered for him; you more than I, perhaps;
but I, too, have given up everything for him. My whole life has been
at his service. I have been his creature, to do his bidding, just as
he might tell me. He made me do things that I knew to be
wrong,—things that were foreign to my own nature; and yet I almost
worshipped him. Even now, if he were to come back, I believe that I
should forgive him everything."</p>
<p>"I should forgive him, but I could never do more."</p>
<p>"But he will never come back. He will never ask us to forgive him, or
even wish it. He has no heart."</p>
<p>"He has longed for money till the Devil has hardened his heart," said
Alice.</p>
<p>"And yet how tender he could be in his manner when he chose it;—how
soft he could make his words and his looks! Do you remember how he
behaved to us in Switzerland? Do you remember that balcony at Basle,
and the night we sat there, when the boys were swimming down the
river?"</p>
<p>"Yes;—I remember."</p>
<p>"So do I! So do I! Alice, I would give all I have in the world, if I
could recall that journey to Switzerland."</p>
<p>"If you mean for my sake, Kate—"</p>
<p>"I do mean for your sake. It made no difference to me. Whether I
stayed in Westmoreland or went abroad, I must have found out that my
god was made of bricks and clay instead of gold. But there was no
need for you to be crushed in the ruins."</p>
<p>"I am not crushed, Kate!"</p>
<p>"Of course, you are too proud to own it?"</p>
<p>"If you mean about Mr. Grey, that would have happened just the same,
whether I had gone abroad or remained at home."</p>
<p>"Would it, dear?"</p>
<p>"Just the same."</p>
<p>There was nothing more than this said between them about Mr. Grey.
Even to her cousin, Alice could not bring herself to talk freely on
that subject. She would never allow herself to think, for a moment,
that she had been persuaded by others to treat him as she had treated
him. She was sure that she had acted on her own convictions of what
was right and wrong; and now, though she had begun to feel that she
had been wrong, she would hardly confess as much even to herself.</p>
<p>They walked back, down the hill, to the Hall in silence for the
greater part of the way. Once or twice Kate repeated her conviction
that she should never again see her brother. "I do not know what may
happen to him," she said in answer to her cousin's questions; "but
when he was passing out of my sight into the valley, I felt that I
was looking at him for the last time."</p>
<p>"That is simply what people call a presentiment," Alice replied.</p>
<p>"Exactly so; and presentiments, of course, mean nothing," said Kate.</p>
<p>Then they walked on towards the house without further speech; but
when they reached the end of the little path which led out of the
wood, on to the gravelled sweep before the front door, they were both
arrested by a sight that met their eyes. There was a man standing,
with a cigar in his mouth, before them, swinging a little cane, and
looking about him up at the wood. He had on his head a jaunty little
straw-hat, and he wore a jacket with brass buttons, and white
trousers. It was now nearly the middle of May, but the summer does
not come to Westmoreland so early as that, and the man, as he stood
there looking about him, seemed to be cold and almost uncomfortable.
He had not as yet seen the two girls, who stood at the end of the
walk, arrested by the sight of him. "Who is it?" asked Alice, in a
whisper.</p>
<p>"Captain Bellfield," said Kate, speaking with something very like
dismay in her voice.</p>
<p>"What! aunt Greenow's Captain?"</p>
<p>"Yes; aunt Greenow's Captain. I have been fearing this, and now, what
on earth are we to do with him? Look at him. That's what aunt Greenow
calls a sniff of the rocks and valleys."</p>
<p>The Captain began to move,—just to move, as though it were necessary
to do something to keep the life in his limbs. He had finished his
cigar, and looked at the end of it with manifest regret. As he threw
it away among a tuft of shrubs his eye fell upon the two ladies, and
he uttered a little exclamation. Then he came forward, waving his
little straw-hat in his hand, and made his salutation. "Miss Vavasor,
I am delighted," he said. "Miss Alice Vavasor, if I am not mistaken?
I have been commissioned by my dear friend Mrs. Greenow to go out and
seek you, but, upon my word, the woods looked so black that I did not
dare to venture;—and then, of course, I shouldn't have found you."</p>
<p>Kate put out her left hand, and then introduced her cousin to the
Captain. Again he waved his little straw-hat, and strove to bear
himself as though he were at home and comfortable. But he failed, and
it was manifest that he failed. He was not the Bellfield who had
conquered Mr. Cheesacre on the sands at Yarmouth, though he wore the
same jacket and waistcoat, and must now have enjoyed the internal
satisfaction of feeling that his future maintenance in life was
assured to him. But he was not at his ease. His courage had sufficed
to enable him to follow his quarry into Westmoreland, but it did not
suffice to make him comfortable while he was there. Kate instantly
perceived his condition, and wickedly resolved that she would make no
effort to assist him. She went through some ceremony of introduction,
and then expressed her surprise at seeing him so far north.</p>
<p>"Well," said he; "I am a little surprised myself;—I am, indeed! But
I had nothing to do in Norwich,—literally nothing; and your aunt had
so often talked to me of the beauties of this place,"—and he waved
his hand round at the old house and the dark trees,—"that I thought
I'd take the liberty of paying you a flying visit. I didn't mean to
intrude in the way of sleeping; I didn't indeed, Miss Vavasor; only
Mrs. Greenow has been so kind as to <span class="nowrap">say—"</span></p>
<p>"We are so very far out of the world, Captain Bellfield, that we
always give our visitors beds."</p>
<p>"I didn't intend it; I didn't indeed, miss!" Poor Captain Bellfield
was becoming very uneasy in his agitation. "I did just put my bag,
with a change of things, into the gig, which brought me over, not
knowing quite where I might go on to."</p>
<p>"We won't send you any further to-day, at any rate," said Kate.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Greenow has been very kind,—very kind, indeed. She has asked me
to stay till—Saturday!"</p>
<p>Kate bit her lips in a momentary fit of anger. The house was her
house, and not her aunt's. But she remembered that her aunt had been
kind to her at Norwich and at Yarmouth, and she allowed this feeling
to die away. "We shall be very glad to see you," she said. "We are
three women together here, and I'm afraid you will find us rather
dull."</p>
<p>"Oh dear, no,—dull with you! That would be impossible!"</p>
<p>"And how have you left your friend, Mr. Cheesacre?"</p>
<p>"Quite well;—very well, thank you. That is to say, I haven't seen
him much lately. He and I did have a bit of a breeze, you know."</p>
<p>"I can't say that I did know, Captain Bellfield."</p>
<p>"I thought, perhaps, you had heard. He seemed to think that I was too
particular in a certain quarter! Ha—ha—ha—ha! That's only my joke,
you know, ladies."</p>
<p>They then went into the house, and the Captain straggled in after
them. Mrs. Greenow was in neither of the two sitting-rooms which they
usually occupied. She, too, had been driven somewhat out of the
ordinary composure of her manner by the arrival of her lover,—even
though she had expected it, and had retired to her room, thinking
that she had better see Kate in private before they met in the
presence of the Captain. "I suppose you have seen my aunt since you
have been here?" said Kate.</p>
<p>"Oh dear, yes. I saw her, and she suggested that I had better walk
out and find you. I did find you, you know, though I didn't walk very
far."</p>
<p>"And have you seen your room?"</p>
<p>"Yes;—yes. She was kind enough to show me my room. Very nice indeed,
thank you;—looking out into the front, and all that kind of thing."
The poor fellow was no doubt thinking how much better was his lot at
Vavasor Hall than it had been at Oileymead. "I shan't stay long, Miss
Vavasor,—only just a night or so; but I did want to see your aunt
again,—and you, too, upon my word."</p>
<p>"My aunt is the attraction, Captain Bellfield. We all know that."</p>
<p>He actually simpered,—simpered like a young girl who is half elated
and half ashamed when her lover is thrown in her teeth. He fidgeted
with the things on the table, and moved himself about uneasily from
one leg to the other. Perhaps he was remembering that though he had
contrived to bring himself to Vavasor Hall he had not money enough
left to take him back to Norwich. The two girls left him and went to
their rooms. "I will go to my aunt at once," said Kate, "and find out
what is to be done."</p>
<p>"I suppose she means to marry him?"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes; she means to marry him, and the sooner the better now. I
knew this was coming, but I did so hope it would not be while you
were here. It makes me feel so ashamed of myself that you should see
it."</p>
<p>Kate boldly knocked at her aunt's door, and her aunt received her
with a conscious smile. "I was waiting for you to come," said Mrs.
Greenow.</p>
<p>"Here I am, aunt; and, what is more to the purpose, there is Captain
Bellfield in the drawing-room."</p>
<p>"Stupid man! I told him to take himself away about the place till
dinner-time. I've half a mind to send him back to Shap at once;—upon
my word I have."</p>
<p>"Don't do that, aunt; it would be inhospitable."</p>
<p>"But he is such an oaf. I hope you understand, my dear, that I
couldn't help it?"</p>
<p>"But you do mean to—to marry him, aunt; don't you?"</p>
<p>"Well, Kate, I really think I do. Why shouldn't I? It's a lonely sort
of life being by myself; and, upon my word, I don't think there's
very much harm in him."</p>
<p>"I am not saying anything against him; only in that case you can't
very well turn him out of the house."</p>
<p>"Could not I, though? I could in a minute; and, if you wish it, you
shall see if I can't do it."</p>
<p>"The rocks and valleys would not allow that, aunt."</p>
<p>"It's all very well for you to laugh, my dear. If laughing would
break my bones I shouldn't be as whole as I am now. I might have had
Cheesacre if I liked, who is a substantial man, and could have kept a
carriage for me; but it was the rocks and valleys that prevented
that;—and perhaps a little feeling that I might do some good to a
poor fellow who has nobody in the world to look after him." Mrs.
Greenow, as she said this, put her handkerchief up to her eyes, and
wiped away the springing moisture. Tears were always easy with her,
but on this occasion Kate almost respected her tears. "I'm sure I
hope you'll be happy, aunt."</p>
<p>"If he makes me unhappy he shall pay for it;" and Mrs. Greenow, having
done with the tears, shook her head, as though upon this occasion she
quite meant all that she said.</p>
<p>At dinner they were not very comfortable. Either the gloomy air of
the place and the neighbourhood of the black pines had depressed the
Captain, or else the glorious richness of the prospects before him
had made him thoughtful. He had laid aside the jacket with the brass
buttons, and had dressed himself for dinner very soberly. And he
behaved himself at dinner and after dinner with a wonderful sobriety,
being very unlike the Captain who had sat at the head of the table at
Mrs. Greenow's picnic. When left to himself after dinner he barely
swallowed two glasses of the old Squire's port wine before he
sauntered out into the garden to join the ladies, whom he had seen
there; and when pressed by Kate to light a cigar he positively
declined.</p>
<p>On the following morning Mrs. Greenow had recovered her composure, but
Captain Bellfield was still in a rather disturbed state of mind. He
knew that his efforts were to be crowned with success, and that he
was sure of his wife, but he did not know how the preliminary
difficulties were to be overcome, and he did not know what to do with
himself at the Hall. After breakfast he fidgeted about in the
parlour, being unable to contrive for himself a mode of escape, and
was absolutely thrown upon his beam-ends when the widow asked him
what he meant to do with himself between that and dinner.</p>
<p>"I suppose I'd better take a walk," he said; "and perhaps the young
<span class="nowrap">ladies—"</span></p>
<p>"If you mean my two nieces," said Mrs. Greenow, "I'm afraid you'll
find they are engaged. But if I'm not too old to walk
<span class="nowrap">with—" </span>The
Captain assured her that she was just of the proper age for a walking
companion, as far as his taste went, and then attempted some apology
for the awkwardness of his expression, at which the three women
laughed heartily. "Never mind, Captain," said Mrs. Greenow. "We'll
have our walk all the same, and won't mind those young girls. Come
along." They started, not up towards the mountains, as Kate always
did when she walked in Westmoreland, but mildly, and at a gentle
pace, as beseemed their years, along the road towards Shap. The
Captain politely opened the old gate for the widow, and then
carefully closed it again,—not allowing it to swing, as he would
have done at Yarmouth. Then he tripped up to his place beside her,
suggested his arm, which she declined, and walked on for some paces
in silence. What on earth was he to say to her? He had done his
love-making successfully, and what was he to do next?</p>
<p>"Well, Captain Bellfield," said she. They were walking very slowly,
and he was cutting the weeds by the roadside with his cane. He knew
by her voice that something special was coming, so he left the weeds
and ranged himself close up alongside of her. "Well, Captain
Bellfield,—so I suppose I'm to be good-natured; am I?"</p>
<p>"Arabella, you'll make me the happiest man in the world."</p>
<p>"That's all fudge." She would have said, "all rocks and valleys,"
only he would not have understood her.</p>
<p>"Upon my word, you will."</p>
<p>"I hope I shall make you respectable?"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes; certainly. I quite intend that."</p>
<p>"It is the great thing that you should intend. Of course I am going
to make a fool of myself."</p>
<p>"No, no; don't say that."</p>
<p>"If I don't say it, all my friends will say it for me. It's lucky for
you that I don't much care what people say."</p>
<p>"It is lucky;—I know that I'm lucky. The very first day I saw you I
thought what a happy fellow I was to meet you. Then, of course, I was
only thinking of your beauty."</p>
<p>"Get along with you!"</p>
<p>"Upon my word, yes. Come, Arabella, as we are to be man and wife, you
might as well." At this moment he had got very close to her, and had
recovered something of his usual elasticity; but she would not allow
him even to put his arm round her waist. "Out in the high road!" she
said. "How can you be so impertinent,—and so foolish?"</p>
<p>"You might as well, you know,—just once."</p>
<p>"Captain Bellfield, I brought you out here not for such fooling as
that, but in order that we might have a little chat about business.
If we are to be man and wife, as you say, we ought to understand on
what footing we are to begin together. I'm afraid your own private
means are not considerable?"</p>
<p>"Well, no; they are not, Mrs. Greenow."</p>
<p>"Have you anything?" The Captain hesitated, and poked the ground with
his cane. "Come, Captain Bellfield, let us have the truth at once,
and then we shall understand each other." The Captain still
hesitated, and said nothing. "You must have had something to live
upon, I suppose?" suggested the widow. Then the Captain, by degrees,
told his story. He had a married sister by whom a guinea a week was
allowed to him. That was all. He had been obliged to sell out of the
army, because he was unable to live on his pay as a lieutenant. The
price of his commission had gone to pay his debts, and now,—yes, it
was too true,—now he was in debt again. He owed ninety pounds to
Cheesacre, thirty-two pounds ten to a tailor at Yarmouth, over
seventeen pounds at his lodgings in Norwich. At the present moment he
had something under thirty shillings in his pocket. The tailor at
Yarmouth had lent him three pounds in order that he might make his
journey into Westmoreland, and perhaps be enabled to pay his debts by
getting a rich wife. In the course of the cross-examination Mrs.
Greenow got much information out of him; and then, when she was
satisfied that she had learned, not exactly all the truth, but
certain indications of the truth, she forgave him all his offences.</p>
<p>"And now you will give a fellow a kiss,—just one kiss," said the
ecstatic Captain, in the height of his bliss.</p>
<p>"Hush!" said the widow, "there's a carriage coming on the road—close
to us."</p>
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