North and South eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 692 pages of information about North and South.

North and South eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 692 pages of information about North and South.
of temper at the time, which probably made them both quits.  It was the five hours of waiting that struck Mr. Thornton.  He had not five hours to spare himself; but one hour—­two hours, of his hard penetrating intellectual, as well as bodily labour, did he give up to going about collecting evidence as to the truth of Higgins’s story, the nature of his character, the tenor of his life.  He tried not to be, but was convinced that all that Higgins had said. was true.  And then the conviction went in, as if by some spell, and touched the latent tenderness of his heart; the patience of the man, the simple generosity of the motive (for he had learnt about the quarrel between Boucher and Higgins), made him forget entirely the mere reasonings of justice, and overleap them by a diviner instinct.  He came to tell Higgins he would give him work; and he was more annoyed to find Margaret there than by hearing her last words, for then he understood that she was the woman who had urged Higgins to come to him; and he dreaded the admission of any thought of her, as a motive to what he was doing solely because it was right.

‘So that was the lady you spoke of as a woman?’ said he indignantly to Higgins.  ’You might have told me who she was.

‘And then, maybe, yo’d ha’ spoken of her more civil than yo’ did; yo’d getten a mother who might ha’ kept yo’r tongue in check when yo’ were talking o’ women being at the root o’ all the plagues.’

‘Of course you told that to Miss Hale?’

’In coorse I did.  Leastways, I reckon I did.  I telled her she weren’t to meddle again in aught that concerned yo’.’

‘Whose children are those—­yours?’ Mr. Thornton had a pretty good notion whose they were, from what he had heard; but he felt awkward in turning the conversation round from this unpromising beginning.

‘They’re not mine, and they are mine.’

‘They are the children you spoke of to me this morning?’

‘When yo’ said,’ replied Higgins, turning round, with ill-smothered fierceness, ’that my story might be true or might not, bur it were a very unlikely one.  Measter, I’ve not forgetten.’

Mr. Thornton was silent for a moment; then he said:  ’No more have I. I remember what I said.  I spoke to you about those children in a way I had no business to do.  I did not believe you.  I could not have taken care of another man’s children myself, if he had acted towards me as I hear Boucher did towards you.  But I know now that you spoke truth.  I beg your pardon.’

Higgins did not turn round, or immediately respond to this.  But when he did speak, it was in a softened tone, although the words were gruff enough.

’Yo’ve no business to go prying into what happened between Boucher and me.  He’s dead, and I’m sorry.  That’s enough.’

’So it is.  Will you take work with me?  That’s what I came to ask.’

Higgins’s obstinacy wavered, recovered strength, and stood firm.  He would not speak.  Mr. Thornton would not ask again.  Higgins’s eye fell on the children.

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North and South from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.