Part 5 (1/2)
”Consarn it!” said the startled hedger, ”you gooa off like a popgun, neighbour Hepton. You oppen yer mooth an' bark, just like a s.h.i.+ppard dog. Then you're toddlin' yam.”
”Hey,” said the carpenter, ”but what were you sayin' about a Methodist chapel at Nestleton?”
”Why, n.o.bbut 'at we're gannin' te hae yan. Ah reckon you'll be glad te see it!”
”Hey, but ah shan't see it, till two Sundays come i' yah week, or till crows begin to whistle 'Bonnets o' blue.'”
”Jabez Hepton,” said Adam, seriously, ”deean't joke aboot it; ah beleeave it's G.o.d's will 'at we sud hev a chapel, an' be t' help o'
G.o.d ah meean te try. T' wod o' G.o.d's _G.o.d's Wod_, an' He says 'ax an'
you sall hev.' Ah meean te ax, an' there'll be a chapel i' Nestleton a twel'month c.u.m Can'lemas-day. Ah's an aud fowt, neea doot, an' monny a yan beside you'll laugh at ma'. At deean't care t' snuff ov a can'le for that. Wi' G.o.d o' me side, ah isn't freetened hoo things 'll turn out. 'Let G.o.d be true, an' ivvery man a liar.'”
There was that in Adam's tone and manner which conveyed a dignified rebuke to the flippancy of Jabez Hepton, who not only lapsed into silence, but was bound to confess to himself that he was a pigmy in presence of a faith so beautiful and great.
”Good-neet, Adam,” said the carpenter, eventually, ”Ah only wop your wods 'll c.u.m true.”
”Good-neet, Jabez,” said the old man, ”an' deean't fo'get te pray for 't, an' when yo' begin, deean't tire. T' unjust judge had te give in 'cause t' poor widow wadn't let him be, an' you may depend on't,” said Adam, reverently, ”'at t' Just Judge weean't be sae hard te move.
We're His bairns, His aun elect, an' if we cry day an' neet tiv Him, He'll help us speedily. Prayse the Lord! ah's seear on't.”
Adam Olliver's beautiful simplicity of trust inoculated Hepton with the same hopeful spirit shown by Mrs. Houston and her daughter, and that worthy man went home to calculate, as he sat in his ”ingle nook,”
the cost of the chapel, the idea of which he had just met with sarcasm and scorn. Such is the commanding influence of a good example.
”Example is a living law, whose sway Men more than all the written laws obey.”
CHAPTER IX.
THE PROGRESS OF MASTER PHILIP'S WOOING.
”Although thou may never be mine, Although even hope is denied; 'Tis sweeter for thee despairing, Than aught in the world beside.”
_Burns._
Lucy Blyth retired from her brief interview with Philip Fuller, glad, as I have already said, to be relieved from an ordeal which taxed all her powers of self-command. Philip's love for her was clear to a demonstration, and as she bravely and boldly took her own heart to task upon the subject, she had to confess to herself that she felt a sense of delight and satisfaction in his tacit declaration. ”I love him!” was the language of her own soul, written there in characters so clear that she made no foolish attempt to cast the thought aside. Like a clear-conscienced, high-principled girl, as she was, she looked the whole matter fairly in the face, and soon came to the conclusion that duty and propriety demanded a firm resistance to the dangerous fascination. She resolved that never, by any word or deed of hers, would she give encouragement to what she knew would be an impossible affection, an unpardonable offence to the proud and stately squire, and a grievous sorrow to her beloved and doting father.
When Natty came in to dinner she had regained full command over herself, for Lucy had that secret supply of strength which is given to all those who walk with G.o.d, and Blithe Natty's suspicions, if he had any, were, at any rate, temporarily laid to rest. Neither of them mentioned the events of the morning, and wisely so, for stout resistance in such a case is more easily accomplished under the silent system. Opposition, interference, condemnation, are sadly apt to fan such sparks into a more fervent flame, and to supply fuel to a fire which might haply die away for want of it. Nathan Blyth was quite right in placing implicit confidence in the religious principles and firm character of his right-minded girl.
Philip Fuller, however, was subject to no such restraining influences; at any rate, they remained as yet undeveloped. His all-engrossing love led him to seek an opportunity to declare it, and to nurse the hope that he should hear from her own lips the response he so much desired.
On two or three occasions he sought an interview with her, but Lucy's woman's wit had seen his design and foiled it. Twice, when Adam Olliver was returning from his daily toil, he had descried the youthful squire following Lucy, and had seen that young lady start off at a rapid run to avoid the meeting.
One evening, as Lucy was returning from a solitary cottage at some distance from the village, whither she had been on a good Samaritan kind of errand, Philip Fuller suddenly met her face to face. It was impossible to elude him, or to evade the announcement which she knew was trembling on his lips. With a lover's impetuosity he entered at once on the subject nearest to his heart.
”Miss Blyth,” he said, ”for I suppose I must not call you 'Lucy'
now;”--Here the cunning young gentleman paused, hoping to ”score one”
by hearing the coveted permission. In vain, however, for though I don't pretend to deny that ”Lucy” from his lips had a music of its own, she remained tremblingly silent, waiting for what should follow, in that odd mingling of hope and fear which baffles psychologists to a.n.a.lyse or metaphysicians to explain.
”Do you remember,” continued he, ”those pleasant hours of 'auld lang syne?' I wish they could have lasted for ever.”