Pembroke eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 315 pages of information about Pembroke.

Pembroke eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 315 pages of information about Pembroke.

“If he wa’n’t sick, I’d whip him,” said Deborah, between tight lips; the spiritual whip which Ephraim held by right of his illness over her seemed to sing past her ears.  She shook Caleb with the force with which she might have shaken Ephraim.  “You’d better get up an’ go to bed now, instead of sleepin’ in your chair,” she said, imperatively; and Caleb obeyed, staggering, half-dazed, across the floor into the bedroom.  Deborah was only a few years younger than her husband, but she had retained her youthful vigor in much greater degree.  She never felt the drowsiness of age stealing over her at nightfall.  Indeed, oftentimes her senses seemed to gain in alertness as the day wore on, and many a night she was up and at work long after all the other members of her family were in bed.  There came at such times to Deborah Thayer a certain peace and triumphant security, when all the other wills over which her own held contested sway were lulled to sleep, and she could concentrate all her energies upon her work.  Many a long task of needle-work had she done in the silence of the night, by her dim oil lamp; in years past she had spun and woven, and there was in a clothes-press up-stairs a wonderful coverlid in an intricate pattern of blue and white, and not a thread of it woven by the light of the sun.

[Illustration:  “Many a long task of needle-work had she done”]

None of the neighbors knew why Deborah Thayer worked so much at night; they attributed it to her tireless industry.  “The days wa’n’t never long enough for Deborah Thayer,” they said—­and she did not know why herself.

There was deep in her heart a plan for the final disposition of these nightly achievements, but she confided it to no one, not even to Rebecca.  The blue-and-white coverlid, many a daintily stitched linen garment and lace-edged pillow-slip she destined for Rebecca when she should be wed, although she frowned on Rebecca’s lover and spoke harshly to her of marriage.  To-night, while Rebecca lay sobbing in her little bedroom, the mother knitted assiduously until nearly midnight upon a wide linen lace with which to trim dimity curtains for the daughter’s bridal bedstead.

Deborah needed no lamplight for this knitting-work; she was so familiar with it, having knitted yards with her thoughts elsewhere, that she could knit without seeing her needles.

So she sat in the deepening dusk and knitted, and heard the laughter and shouts of the boys at play a little way down the road with a deeper pang than Ephraim had ever felt over his own deprivation.

She was glad when the gay hubbub ceased and the boys were haled into bed.  Shortly afterwards she heard out in the road a quick, manly tread and a merry whistle.  She did not know the tune, but only one young man in Pembroke could whistle like that.  “It’s Thomas Payne goin’ up to see Charlotte Barnard,” she said to herself, with a bitter purse of her lips in the dark.  That merry whistler, passing her

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Pembroke from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.