"But O unseen for three long years,

Dear was the garb of mountaineers

To the fair maid of Lorn."--LORD OF THE ISLES.

"Only nerves," said Alison Williams, whenever she was pushed hard as to

why her sister continued unwell, and her own looks betrayed an anxiety

that her words would not confess. Rachel, after a visit on the first

day, was of the same opinion, and prescribed globules and enlivenment;

but after a personal administration of the latter in the shape of

a discussion of Lord Keith, she never called in the morning without

hearing that Miss Williams was not up, nor in the afternoon without

Alison's meeting her, and being very sorry, but really she thought it

better for her sister to be quite quiet.

In fact, Alison was not seriously uneasy about Ermine's health, for

these nervous attacks were not without precedent, as the revenge for all

excitement of the sensitive mind upon the much-tried constitution. The

reaction must pass off in time, and calm and patience would assist in

restoring her; but the interview with Lord Keith had been a revelation

to her that her affection was not the calm, chastened, mortified, almost

dead thing of the past that she had tried to believe it; but a

young, living, active feeling, as vivid, and as little able to brook

interference as when the first harsh letter from Gowanbrae had fallen

like a thunderbolt on the bright hopes of youth.

She looked back at some

verses that she had written, when first perceiving that life was to be

her portion, where her own intended feelings were ascribed to a maiden

who had taken the veil, believing her crusader slain, but who saw him

return and lead a recluse life, with the light in her cell for his

guiding star. She smiled sadly to find how far the imaginings of four

and twenty transcended the powers of four and thirty; and how the heart

that had deemed itself able to resign was chafed at the appearance of

compulsion. She felt that the right was the same as ever; but it was

an increased struggle to maintain the resolute abstinence from all that

could bind Colin to her, at the moment when he was most likely to be

detached, and it was a struggle rendered the more trying by the monotony

of a life, scarcely varied except by the brainwork, which she was often

obliged to relinquish.

Nothing, however, here assisted her so much as Lady Temple's new pony

carriage which, by Fanny's desire, had been built low enough to permit

of her being easily lifted into it. Inert, and almost afraid of change,

Ermine was hard to persuade, but Alison, guessing at the benefit, was

against her, and Fanny's wistful eyes and caressing voice were not to be

gainsaid; so she suffered herself to be placed on the broad easy seat,

and driven about the lanes, enjoying most intensely the new scenes,

the peeps of sea, the distant moors, the cottages with their glowing

orchards, the sloping harvest fields, the variety that was an absolute

healing to the worn spirits, and moreover, that quiet conversation with

Lady Temple, often about the boys, but more often about Colonel Keith.




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