"Jacobite and traitor, baith! Janet, Janet, how can you turn against me

on every hand?"

"I'll no turn against you, Elder; and I'll gie you no cause for

complaint, if you dinna set King George on my hearthstone, and bring him

to my table, and fling him at me early and late." She was going to light

the candle again; and, with it in her hand, she continued: "That's

enough anent George rex at night-time, for he isna a pleasant thought

for a sleeping one. How is Van Heemskirk going? And Bram?"

"Bram was wi' them that unloaded the schooner and closed the

custom-house--the born idiots!"

"I expected that o' Bram."

"As for his father, he's the blackest rebel you could find or hear tell

o' in the twelve Provinces."

"He's a good man; Joris is a good man, true and sure. The cause he

lifts, he'll never leave. Joris and Bram--excellent! They two are a

multitude."

"Humff!" It was all he could say. There was something in his wife's face

that made it look unfamiliar to him. He felt himself to be like the

prophet of Pethor--a man whose eyes are opened. But Elder Semple was not

one of the foolish ones who waste words. "A wilfu' woman will hae her

way," he thought; "and if Janet has turned rebel to the king, it's mair

than likely she'll throw off my ain lawfu' authority likewise. But we'll

see, we'll see," he muttered, glancing with angry determination at the

little woman, who, for her part, seemed to have put quite away all

thoughts of king and Congress.

She stood with the tinder-box and the flint and brimstone matches in her

hands. "I wonder if the tinder is burnt enough, Alexander," she said;

and with the words she sharply struck the flint. A spark fell instantly

and set fire to it, and she lit her match and watched it blaze with a

singular look of triumph on her face. Somehow the trifling affair

irritated the elder. "What are you doing at a'? You're acting like a

silly bairn, makin' a blaze for naething. There's a fire on the hearth:

whatna for, then, are you wasting tinder and a match?"

"Maybe it wasna for naething, Elder. Maybe I was asking for a sign, and

got the ane I wanted. There's nae sin in that, I hope. You ken Gideon

did it when he had to stand up for the oppressed, and slay the tyrant."

"Tut, woman, you arena Gideon, nor yet o' Gideon's kind; and, forbye,

there's nae angel speaking wi' you."




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