Sylvia's Lovers — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 721 pages of information about Sylvia's Lovers — Complete.

Sylvia's Lovers — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 721 pages of information about Sylvia's Lovers — Complete.

Philip, in spite of himself, recovered and grew stronger; and as he grew stronger hunger took the place of loathing dislike to food.  But his money was all spent; and what was his poor pension of sixpence a day in that terrible year of famine?  Many a summer’s night he walked for hours and hours round the house which once was his, which might be his now, with all its homely, blessed comforts, could he but go and assert his right to it.  But to go with authority, and in his poor, maimed guise assert that right, he had need be other than Philip Hepburn.  So he stood in the old shelter of the steep, crooked lane opening on to the hill out of the market-place, and watched the soft fading of the summer’s eve into night; the closing of the once familiar shop; the exit of good, comfortable William Coulson, going to his own home, his own wife, his comfortable, plentiful supper.  Then Philip—­there were no police in those days, and scarcely an old watchman in that primitive little town—­would go round on the shady sides of streets, and, quickly glancing about him, cross the bridge, looking on the quiet, rippling stream, the gray shimmer foretelling the coming dawn over the sea, the black masts and rigging of the still vessels against the sky; he could see with his wistful, eager eyes the shape of the windows—­the window of the very room in which his wife and child slept, unheeding of him, the hungry, broken-hearted outcast.  He would go back to his lodging, and softly lift the latch of the door; still more softly, but never without an unspoken, grateful prayer, pass by the poor sleeping woman who had given him a shelter and her share of God’s blessing—­she who, like him, knew not the feeling of satisfied hunger; and then he laid him down on the narrow pallet in the lean-to, and again gave Sylvia happy lessons in the kitchen at Haytersbank, and the dead were alive; and Charley Kinraid, the specksioneer, had never come to trouble the hopeful, gentle peace.

For widow Dobson had never taken Sylvia’s advice.  The tramp known to her by the name of Freeman—­that in which he received his pension—­lodged with her still, and paid his meagre shilling in advance, weekly.  A shilling was meagre in those hard days of scarcity.  A hungry man might easily eat the produce of a shilling in a day.

Widow Dobson pleaded this to Sylvia as an excuse for keeping her lodger on; to a more calculating head it might have seemed a reason for sending him away.

‘Yo’ see, missus,’ said she, apologetically, to Sylvia, one evening, as the latter called upon the poor widow before going to fetch little Bella (it was now too hot for the child to cross the bridge in the full heat of the summer sun, and Jeremiah would take her up to her supper instead)—­’Yo’ see, missus, there’s not a many as ’ud take him in for a shillin’ when it goes so little way; or if they did, they’d take it out on him some other way, an’ he’s not getten much else, a reckon.  He ca’s me granny, but a’m

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Sylvia's Lovers — Complete from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.