Daniel's unusually late absence from home disturbed Bell and Sylvia

not a little. He was generally at home between eight and nine on

market days. They expected to see him the worse for liquor at such

times; but this did not shock them; he was no worse than most of his

neighbours, indeed better than several, who went off once or twice a

year, or even oftener, on drinking bouts of two or three days'

duration, returning pale, sodden, and somewhat shame-faced, when all

their money was gone; and, after the conjugal reception was well

over, settling down into hard-working and decently sober men until

the temptation again got power over them. But, on market days, every

man drank more than usual; every bargain or agreement was ratified

by drink; they came from greater or less distances, either afoot or

on horseback, and the 'good accommodation for man and beast' (as the

old inn-signs expressed it) always included a considerable amount of

liquor to be drunk by the man.

Daniel's way of announcing his intention of drinking more than

ordinary was always the same. He would say at the last moment,

'Missus, I've a mind to get fuddled to-neet,' and be off,

disregarding her look of remonstrance, and little heeding the

injunctions she would call after him to beware of such and such

companions, or to attend to his footsteps on his road home.

But this night he had given no such warning. Bell and Sylvia put the

candle on the low window-seat at the usual hour to guide him through

the fields--it was a habit kept up even on moonlight nights like

this--and sate on each side of the fire, at first scarcely caring to

listen, so secure were they of his return. Bell dozed, and Sylvia

sate gazing at the fire with abstracted eyes, thinking of the past

year and of the anniversary which was approaching of the day when

she had last seen the lover whom she believed to be dead, lying

somewhere fathoms deep beneath the surface of that sunny sea on

which she looked day by day without ever seeing his upturned face

through the depths, with whatsoever heart-sick longing for just one

more sight she yearned and inwardly cried. If she could set her eyes

on his bright, handsome face, that face which was fading from her

memory, overtasked in the too frequent efforts to recall it; if she

could but see him once again, coming over the waters beneath which

he lay with supernatural motion, awaiting her at the stile, with the

evening sun shining ruddy into his bonny eyes, even though, after

that one instant of vivid and visible life, he faded into mist; if

she could but see him now, sitting in the faintly flickering

fire-light in the old, happy, careless way, on a corner of the

dresser, his legs dangling, his busy fingers playing with some of

her woman's work;--she wrung her hands tight together as she

implored some, any Power, to let her see him just once again--just

once--for one minute of passionate delight. Never again would she

forget that dear face, if but once more she might set her eyes upon

it.




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