"Do you know, father, where Bram is likely to be found?"

"Hum-m-m! As if you didna know yoursel'! He will dootless be among that

crowd o' young wiseacres wha are certain the safety o' the Provinces is

in their keeping. It's the young who ken a' things, ken mair than

councils and assemblies, and king and parliament, thegither."

Colonel Gordon laughed. "Never mind, sir," he said, "they let the army

alone, and the church; so you and I need hardly alarm ourselves"-"I'm no sure o' that, Colonel. When it comes to the army, it's a mere

question o' wha can strike the hardest blows; and as to kirk matters,

I'm thinking men had better meddle wi' the things o' God, which they

canna change, than wi' those o' the king wi' which they can wark a deal

o' mischief."

While he was speaking, Neil left the room. The little argument struck

him as a pretext and a cover, and he was glad to escape from a position

which he felt to be both painful and humiliating. He was in a measure

Captain Hyde's host, and subject to traditions regarding the duties of

that character; any display of anger would be derogatory to him, and yet

how difficult was restraint! So his father's interference was a welcome

one; and he was reconciled to his own disappointment, when, looking

back, he saw the old gentleman slowly taking the road to Van Heemskirk's

with the pretty girls in their quilted red hoods, one on each side of

him.

The elder was very polite to his charges; he never once regretted to

them the loss of his pipe, and chat with Colonel Gordon. But he noticed

that Katherine was silent and disappointed, and that she lingered in her

own room after her arrival at home. Her subsequent pretty cheerfulness,

her delight in her lilies, her confiding claims upon her father's

love,--nothing in these things deceived him. He saw beneath all the

fluttering young heart, trembling, and yet happy in the new, sweet

feeling, never felt before, which had come to it that afternoon.

But he thought that most girls had to have this initiative: it prepared

the way for a soberer and more lasting affection. In the end, Katherine

would perceive how imprudent, how impossible, a marriage with Captain

Hyde must be; and her heart would turn back to Neil, who had been her

lover from boyhood. Yet he reflected, it would be well to have the

matter understood, and to give it that "possibility" which is best

attained on a money basis.




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