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North and South
CHAPTER XXXVIII - PROMISES FULFILLED
Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell
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       _ CHAPTER XXXVIII - PROMISES FULFILLED
       'Then proudly, proudly up she rose,
       Tho' the tear was in her e'e,
       "Whate'er ye say, think what ye may,
       Ye's get na word frae me!"'
       SCOTCH BALLAD.
       It was not merely that Margaret was known to Mr. Thornton to have
       spoken falsely,--though she imagined that for this reason only
       was she so turned in his opinion,--but that this falsehood of
       hers bore a distinct reference in his mind to some other lover.
       He could not forget the fond and earnest look that had passed
       between her and some other man--the attitude of familiar
       confidence, if not of positive endearment. The thought of this
       perpetually stung him; it was a picture before his eyes, wherever
       he went and whatever he was doing. In addition to this (and he
       ground his teeth as he remembered it), was the hour, dusky
       twilight; the place, so far away from home, and comparatively
       unfrequented. His nobler self had said at first, that all this
       last might be accidental, innocent, justifiable; but once allow
       her right to love and be beloved (and had he any reason to deny
       her right?--had not her words been severely explicit when she
       cast his love away from her?), she might easily have been
       beguiled into a longer walk, on to a later hour than she had
       anticipated. But that falsehood! which showed a fatal
       consciousness of something wrong, and to be concealed, which was
       unlike her. He did her that justice, though all the time it would
       have been a relief to believe her utterly unworthy of his esteem.
       It was this that made the misery--that he passionately loved her,
       and thought her, even with all her faults, more lovely and more
       excellent than any other woman; yet he deemed her so attached to
       some other man, so led away by her affection for him as to
       violate her truthful nature. The very falsehood that stained her,
       was a proof how blindly she loved another--this dark, slight,
       elegant, handsome man--while he himself was rough, and stern, and
       strongly made. He lashed himself into an agony of fierce
       jealousy. He thought of that look, that attitude!--how he would
       have laid his life at her feet for such tender glances, such fond
       detention! He mocked at himself, for having valued the mechanical
       way in which she had protected him from the fury of the mob; now
       he had seen how soft and bewitching she looked when with a man
       she really loved. He remembered, point by point, the sharpness of
       her words--'There was not a man in all that crowd for whom she
       would not have done as much, far more readily than for him.' He
       shared with the mob, in her desire of averting bloodshed from
       them; but this man, this hidden lover, shared with nobody; he had
       looks, words, hand-cleavings, lies, concealment, all to himself.
       Mr. Thornton was conscious that he had never been so irritable as
       he was now, m all his life long; he felt inclined to give a short
       abrupt answer, more like a bark than a speech, to every one that
       asked him a question; and this consciousness hurt his pride he
       had always piqued himself on his self-control, and control
       himself he would. So the manner was subdued to a quiet
       deliberation, but the matter was even harder and sterner than
       common. He was more than usually silent at home; employing his
       evenings in a continual pace backwards and forwards, which would
       have annoyed his mother exceedingly if it had been practised by
       any one else; and did not tend to promote any forbearance on her
       part even to this beloved son.
       'Can you stop--can you sit down for a moment? I have something to
       say to you, if you would give up that everlasting walk, walk,
       walk.'
       He sat down instantly, on a chair against the wall.
       'I want to speak to you about Betsy. She says she must leave us;
       that her lover's death has so affected her spirits she can't give
       her heart to her work.'
       'Very well. I suppose other cooks are to be met with.'
       'That's so like a man. It's not merely the cooking, it is that
       she knows all the ways of the house. Besides, she tells me
       something about your friend Miss Hale.'
       'Miss Hale is no friend of mine. Mr. Hale is my friend.'
       'I am glad to hear you say so, for if she had been your friend,
       what Betsy says would have annoyed you.'
       'Let me hear it,' said he, with the extreme quietness of manner
       he had been assuming for the last few days.
       'Betsy says, that the night on which her lover--I forget his
       name--for she always calls him "he"----'
       'Leonards.'
       'The night on which Leonards was last seen at the station--when
       he was last seen on duty, in fact--Miss Hale was there, walking
       about with a young man who, Betsy believes, killed Leonards by
       some blow or push.'
       'Leonards was not killed by any blow or push.'
       'How do you know?'
       'Because I distinctly put the question to the surgeon of the
       Infirmary. He told me there was an internal disease of long
       standing, caused by Leonards' habit of drinking to excess; that
       the fact of his becoming rapidly worse while in a state of
       intoxication, settled the question as to whether the last fatal
       attack was caused by excess of drinking, or the fall.'
       'The fall! What fall?'
       'Caused by the blow or push of which Betsy speaks.'
       'Then there was a blow or push?'
       'I believe so.'
       'And who did it?'
       'As there was no inquest, in consequence of the doctor's opinion,
       I cannot tell you.'
       'But Miss Hale was there?'
       No answer.
       'And with a young man?'
       Still no answer. At last he said: 'I tell you, mother, that there
       was no inquest--no inquiry. No judicial inquiry, I mean.'
       'Betsy says that Woolmer (some man she knows, who is in a
       grocer's shop out at Crampton) can swear that Miss Hale was at
       the station at that hour, walking backwards and forwards with a
       young man.'
       'I don't see what we have to do with that. Miss Hale is at
       liberty to please herself.'
       'I'm glad to hear you say so,' said Mrs. Thornton, eagerly. 'It
       certainly signifies very little to us--not at all to you, after
       what has passed! but I--I made a promise to Mrs. Hale, that I
       would not allow her daughter to go wrong without advising and
       remonstrating with her. I shall certainly let her know my opinion
       of such conduct.'
       'I do not see any harm in what she did that evening,' said Mr.
       Thornton, getting up, and coming near to his mother; he stood by
       the chimney-piece with his face turned away from the room.
       'You would not have approved of Fanny's being seen out, after
       dark, in rather a lonely place, walking about with a young man. I
       say nothing of the taste which could choose the time, when her
       mother lay unburied, for such a promenade. Should you have liked
       your sister to have been noticed by a grocer's assistant for
       doing so?'
       'In the first place, as it is not many years since I myself was a
       draper's assistant, the mere circumstance of a grocer's assistant
       noticing any act does not alter the character of the act to me.
       And in the next place, I see a great deal of difference between
       Miss Hale and Fanny. I can imagine that the one may have weighty
       reasons, which may and ought to make her overlook any seeming
       Impropriety in her conduct. I never knew Fanny have weighty
       reasons for anything. Other people must guard her. I believe Miss
       Hale is a guardian to herself'
       'A pretty character of your sister, indeed! Really, John, one
       would have thought Miss Hale had done enough to make you
       clear-sighted. She drew you on to an offer, by a bold display of
       pretended regard for you,--to play you off against this very
       young man, I've no doubt. Her whole conduct is clear to me now.
       You believe he is her lover, I suppose--you agree to that.'
       He turned round to his mother; his face was very gray and grim.
       'Yes, mother. I do believe he is her lover.' When he had spoken,
       he turned round again; he writhed himself about, like one in
       bodily pain. He leant his face against his hand. Then before she
       could speak, he turned sharp again:
       'Mother. He is her lover, whoever he is; but she may need help
       and womanly counsel;--there may be difficulties or temptations
       which I don't know. I fear there are. I don't want to know what
       they are; but as you have ever been a good--ay! and a tender
       mother to me, go to her, and gain her confidence, and tell her
       what is best to be done. I know that something is wrong; some
       dread, must be a terrible torture to her.'
       'For God's sake, John!' said his mother, now really shocked,
       'what do you mean? What do you mean? What do you know?'
       He did not reply to her.
       'John! I don't know what I shan't think unless you speak. You
       have no right to say what you have done against her.'
       'Not against her, mother! I ~could~ not speak against her.'
       'Well! you have no right to say what you have done, unless you
       say more. These half-expressions are what ruin a woman's
       character.'
       'Her character! Mother, you do not dare--' he faced about, and
       looked into her face with his flaming eyes. Then, drawing himself
       up into determined composure and dignity, he said, 'I will not
       say any more than this, which is neither more nor less than the
       simple truth, and I am sure you believe me,--I have good reason
       to believe, that Miss Hale is in some strait and difficulty
       connected with an attachment which, of itself, from my knowledge
       of Miss Hale's character, is perfectly innocent and right. What
       my reason is, I refuse to tell. But never let me hear any one say
       a word against her, implying any more serious imputation than
       that she now needs the counsel of some kind and gentle woman. You
       promised Mrs. Hale to be that woman!'
       No!' said Mrs. Thornton. 'I am happy to say, I did not promise
       kindness and gentleness, for I felt at the time that it might be
       out of my power to render these to one of Miss Hale's character
       and disposition. I promised counsel and advice, such as I would
       give to my own daughter; I shall speak to her as I would do to
       Fanny, if she had gone gallivanting with a young man in the dusk.
       I shall speak with relation to the circumstances I know, without
       being influenced either one way or another by the "strong
       reasons" which you will not confide to me. Then I shall have
       fulfilled my promise, and done my duty.'
       'She will never bear it,' said he passionately.
       'She will have to bear it, if I speak in her dead mother's name.'
       'Well!' said he, breaking away, 'don't tell me any more about it.
       I cannot endure to think of it. It will be better that you should
       speak to her any way, than that she should not be spoken to at
       all.--Oh! that look of love!' continued he, between his teeth, as
       he bolted himself into his own private room. 'And that cursed
       lie; which showed some terrible shame in the background, to be
       kept from the light in which I thought she lived perpetually! Oh,
       Margaret, Margaret! Mother, how you have tortured me! Oh!
       Margaret, could you not have loved me? I am but uncouth and hard,
       but I would never have led you into any falsehood for me.'
       The more Mrs. Thornton thought over what her son had said, in
       pleading for a merciful judgment for Margaret's indiscretion, the
       more bitterly she felt inclined towards her. She took a savage
       pleasure in the idea of 'speaking her mind' to her, in the guise
       of fulfilment of a duty. She enjoyed the thought of showing
       herself untouched by the 'glamour,' which she was well aware
       Margaret had the power of throwing over many people. She snorted
       scornfully over the picture of the beauty of her victim; her jet
       black hair, her clear smooth skin, her lucid eyes would not help
       to save her one word of the just and stern reproach which Mrs.
       Thornton spent half the night in preparing to her mind.
       'Is Miss Hale within?' She knew she was, for she had seen her at
       the window, and she had her feet inside the little hall before
       Martha had half answered her question.
       Margaret was sitting alone, writing to Edith, and giving her many
       particulars of her mother's last days. It was a softening
       employment, and she had to brush away the unbidden tears as Mrs.
       Thornton was announced.
       She was so gentle and ladylike in her mode of reception that her
       visitor was somewhat daunted; and it became impossible to utter
       the speech, so easy of arrangement with no one to address it to.
       Margaret's low rich voice was softer than usual; her manner more
       gracious, because in her heart she was feeling very grateful to
       Mrs. Thornton for the courteous attention of her call. She
       exerted herself to find subjects of interest for conversation;
       praised Martha, the servant whom Mrs. Thornton had found for
       them; had asked Edith for a little Greek air, about which she had
       spoken to Miss Thornton. Mrs. Thornton was fairly discomfited.
       Her sharp Damascus blade seemed out of place, and useless among
       rose-leaves. She was silent, because she was trying to task
       herself up to her duty At last, she stung herself into its
       performance by a suspicion which, in spite of all probability,
       she allowed to cross her mind, that all this sweetness was put on
       with a view of propitiating Mr. Thornton; that, somehow, the
       other attachment had fallen through, and that it suited Miss
       Hale's purpose to recall her rejected lover. Poor Margaret! there
       was perhaps so much truth in the suspicion as this: that Mrs.
       Thornton was the mother of one whose regard she valued, and
       feared to have lost; and this thought unconsciously added to her
       natural desire of pleasing one who was showing her kindness by
       her visit. Mrs. Thornton stood up to go, but yet she seemed to
       have something more to say. She cleared her throat and began:
       'Miss Hale, I have a duty to perform. I promised your poor mother
       that, as far as my poor judgment went, I would not allow you to
       act in any way wrongly, or (she softened her speech down a little
       here) inadvertently, without remonstrating; at least, without
       offering advice, whether you took it or not.'
       Margaret stood before her, blushing like any culprit, with her
       eyes dilating as she gazed at Mrs. Thornton. She thought she had
       come to speak to her about the falsehood she had told--that Mr.
       Thornton had employed her to explain the danger she had exposed
       herself to, of being confuted in full court! and although her
       heart sank to think he had not rather chosen to come himself, and
       upbraid her, and receive her penitence, and restore her again to
       his good opinion, yet she was too much humbled not to bear any
       blame on this subject patiently and meekly.
       Mrs. Thornton went on:
       'At first, when I heard from one of my servants, that you had
       been seen walking about with a gentleman, so far from home as the
       Outwood station, at such a time of the evening, I could hardly
       believe it. But my son, I am sorry to say, confirmed her story.
       It was indiscreet, to say the least; many a young woman has lost
       her character before now----'
       Margaret's eyes flashed fire. This was a new idea--this was too
       insulting. If Mrs. Thornton had spoken to her about the lie she
       had told, well and good--she would have owned it, and humiliated
       herself But to interfere with her conduct--to speak of her
       character! she--Mrs. Thornton, a mere stranger--it was too
       impertinent! She would not answer her--not one word. Mrs.
       Thornton saw the battle-spirit in Margaret's eyes, and it called.
       up her combativeness also.
       'For your mother's sake, I have thought it right to warn you
       against such improprieties; they must degrade you in the long run
       in the estimation of the world, even if in fact they do not lead
       you to positive harm.'
       'For my mother's sake,' said Margaret, in a tearful voice, 'I
       will bear much; but I cannot bear everything. She never meant me
       to be exposed to insult, I am sure.'
       'Insult, Miss Hale!'
       'Yes, madam,' said Margaret more steadily, 'it is insult. What do
       you know of me that should lead you to suspect--Oh!' said she,
       breaking down, and covering her face with her hands--'I know now,
       Mr. Thornton has told you----'
       'No, Miss Hale,' said Mrs. Thornton, her truthfulness causing her
       to arrest the confession Margaret was on the point of making,
       though her curiosity was itching to hear it. 'Stop. Mr. Thornton
       has told me nothing. You do not know my son. You are not worthy
       to know him. He said this. Listen, young lady, that you may
       understand, if you can, what sort of a man you rejected. This
       Milton manufacturer, his great tender heart scorned as it was
       scorned, said to me only last night, "Go to her. I have good
       reason to know that she is in some strait, arising out of some
       attachment; and she needs womanly counsel." I believe those were
       his very words. Farther than that--beyond admitting the fact of
       your being at the Outwood station with a gentleman, on the
       evening of the twenty-sixth--he has said nothing--not one word
       against you. If he has knowledge of anything which should make
       you sob so, he keeps it to himself.'
       Margaret's face was still hidden in her hands, the fingers of
       which were wet with tears. Mrs. Thornton was a little mollified.
       'Come, Miss Hale. There may be circumstances, I'll allow, that,
       if explained, may take off from the seeming impropriety.'
       Still no answer. Margaret was considering what to say; she wished
       to stand well with Mrs. Thornton; and yet she could not, might
       not, give any explanation. Mrs. Thornton grew impatient.
       'I shall be sorry to break off an acquaintance; but for Fanny's
       sake--as I told my son, if Fanny had done so we should consider
       it a great disgrace--and Fanny might be led away----'
       'I can give you no explanation,' said Margaret, in a low voice.
       'I have done wrong, but not in the way you think or know about. I
       think Mr. Thornton judges me more mercifully than you;'--she had
       hard work to keep herself from choking with her tears--'but, I
       believe, madam, you mean to do rightly.'
       'Thank you,' said Mrs. Thornton, drawing herself up; 'I was not
       aware that my meaning was doubted. It is the last time I shall
       interfere. I was unwilling to consent to do it, when your mother
       asked me. I had not approved of my son's attachment to you, while
       I only suspected it. You did not appear to me worthy of him. But
       when you compromised yourself as you did at the time of the riot,
       and exposed yourself to the comments of servants and workpeople,
       I felt it was no longer right to set myself against my son's wish
       of proposing to you--a wish, by the way, which he had always
       denied entertaining until the day of the riot.' Margaret winced,
       and drew in her breath with a long, hissing sound; of which,
       however, Mrs. Thornton took no notice. 'He came; you had
       apparently changed your mind. I told my son yesterday, that I
       thought it possible, short as was the interval, you might have
       heard or learnt something of this other lover----'
       'What must you think of me, madam?' asked Margaret, throwing her
       head back with proud disdain, till her throat curved outwards
       like a swan's. 'You can say nothing more, Mrs. Thornton. I
       decline every attempt to justify myself for anything. You must
       allow me to leave the room.'
       And she swept out of it with the noiseless grace of an offended
       princess. Mrs. Thornton had quite enough of natural humour to
       make her feel the ludicrousness of the position in which she was
       left. There was nothing for it but to show herself out. She was
       not particularly annoyed at Margaret's way of behaving. She did
       not care enough for her for that. She had taken Mrs. Thornton's
       remonstrance to the full as keenly to heart as that lady
       expected; and Margaret's passion at once mollified her visitor,
       far more than any silence or reserve could have done. It showed
       the effect of her words. 'My young lady,' thought Mrs. Thornton
       to herself; 'you've a pretty good temper of your own. If John and
       you had come together, he would have had to keep a tight hand
       over you, to make you know your place. But I don't think you will
       go a-walking again with your beau, at such an hour of the day, in
       a hurry. You've too much pride and spirit in you for that. I like
       to see a girl fly out at the notion of being talked about. It
       shows they're neither giddy, nor hold by nature. As for that
       girl, she might be hold, but she'd never be giddy. I'll do her
       that justice. Now as to Fanny, she'd be giddy, and not bold.
       She's no courage in her, poor thing!'
       Mr. Thornton was not spending the morning so satisfactorily as
       his mother. She, at any rate, was fulfilling her determined
       purpose. He was trying to understand where he stood; what damage
       the strike had done him. A good deal of his capital was locked up
       in new and expensive machinery; and he had also bought cotton
       largely, with a view to some great orders which he had in hand.
       The strike had thrown him terribly behindhand, as to the
       completion of these orders. Even with his own accustomed and
       skilled workpeople, he would have had some difficulty in
       fulfilling his engagements; as it was, the incompetence of the
       Irish hands, who had to be trained to their work, at a time
       requiring unusual activity, was a daily annoyance.
       It was not a favourable hour for Higgins to make his request. But
       he had promised Margaret to do it at any cost. So, though every
       moment added to his repugnance, his pride, and his sullenness of
       temper, he stood leaning against the dead wall, hour after hour,
       first on one leg, then on the other. At last the latch was
       sharply lifted, and out came Mr. Thornton.
       'I want for to speak to yo', sir.'
       'Can't stay now, my man. I'm too late as it is.'
       'Well, sir, I reckon I can wait till yo' come back.'
       Mr. Thornton was half way down the street. Higgins sighed. But it
       was no use. To catch him in the street was his only chance of
       seeing 'the measter;' if he had rung the lodge bell, or even gone
       up to the house to ask for him, he would have been referred to
       the overlooker. So he stood still again, vouchsafing no answer,
       but a short nod of recognition to the few men who knew and spoke
       to him, as the crowd drove out of the millyard at dinner-time,
       and scowling with all his might at the Irish 'knobsticks' who had
       just been imported. At last Mr. Thornton returned.
       'What! you there still!'
       'Ay, sir. I mun speak to yo'.'
       'Come in here, then. Stay, we'll go across the yard; the men are
       not come back, and we shall have it to ourselves. These good
       people, I see, are at dinner;' said he, closing the door of the
       porter's lodge.
       He stopped to speak to the overlooker. The latter said in a low
       tone:
       'I suppose you know, sir, that that man is Higgins, one of the
       leaders of the Union; he that made that speech in Hurstfield.'
       'No, I didn't,' said Mr. Thornton, looking round sharply at his
       follower. Higgins was known to him by name as a turbulent spirit.
       'Come along,' said he, and his tone was rougher than before. 'It
       is men such as this,' thought he, 'who interrupt commerce and
       injure the very town they live in: mere demagogues, lovers of
       power, at whatever cost to others.'
       'Well, sir! what do you want with me?' said Mr. Thornton, facing
       round at him, as soon as they were in the counting-house of the
       mill.
       'My name is Higgins'--
       'I know that,' broke in Mr. Thornton. 'What do you want, Mr.
       Higgins? That's the question.'
       'I want work.'
       'Work! You're a pretty chap to come asking me for work. You don't
       want impudence, that's very clear.'
       'I've getten enemies and backbiters, like my betters; but I ne'er
       heerd o' ony of them calling me o'er-modest,' said Higgins. His
       blood was a little roused by Mr. Thornton's manner, more than by
       his words.
       Mr. Thornton saw a letter addressed to himself on the table. He
       took it up and read it through. At the end, he looked up and
       said, 'What are you waiting for?'
       'An answer to the question I axed.'
       'I gave it you before. Don't waste any more of your time.'
       'Yo' made a remark, sir, on my impudence: but I were taught that
       it was manners to say either "yes" or "no," when I were axed a
       civil question. I should be thankfu' to yo' if yo'd give me work.
       Hamper will speak to my being a good hand.'
       'I've a notion you'd better not send me to Hamper to ask for a
       character, my man. I might hear more than you'd like.'
       'I'd take th' risk. Worst they could say of me is, that I did
       what I thought best, even to my own wrong.'
       'You'd better go and try them, then, and see whether they'll give
       you work. I've turned off upwards of a hundred of my best hands,
       for no other fault than following you and such as you; and d'ye
       think I'll take you on? I might as well put a firebrand into the
       midst of the cotton-waste.'
       Higgins turned away; then the recollection of Boucher came over
       him, and he faced round with the greatest concession he could
       persuade himself to make.
       'I'd promise yo', measter, I'd not speak a word as could do harm,
       if so be yo' did right by us; and I'd promise more: I'd promise
       that when I seed yo' going wrong, and acting unfair, I'd speak to
       yo' in private first; and that would be a fair warning. If yo'
       and I did na agree in our opinion o' your conduct, yo' might turn
       me off at an hour's notice.'
       'Upon my word, you don't think small beer of yourself! Hamper has
       had a loss of you. How came he to let you and your wisdom go?'
       'Well, we parted wi' mutual dissatisfaction. I wouldn't gi'e the
       pledge they were asking; and they wouldn't have me at no rate. So
       I'm free to make another engagement; and as I said before, though
       I should na' say it, I'm a good hand, measter, and a steady
       man--specially when I can keep fro' drink; and that I shall do
       now, if I ne'er did afore.'
       'That you may have more money laid up for another strike, I
       suppose?'
       'No! I'd be thankful if I was free to do that; it's for to keep
       th' widow and childer of a man who was drove mad by them
       knobsticks o' yourn; put out of his place by a Paddy that did na
       know weft fro' warp.'
       'Well! you'd better turn to something else, if you've any such
       good intention in your head. I shouldn't advise you to stay in
       Milton: you're too well known here.'
       'If it were summer,' said Higgins, 'I'd take to Paddy's work, and
       go as a navvy, or haymaking, or summut, and ne'er see Milton
       again. But it's winter, and th' childer will clem.'
       'A pretty navvy you'd make! why, you couldn't do half a day's
       work at digging against an Irishman.'
       'I'd only charge half-a-day for th' twelve hours, if I could only
       do half-a-day's work in th' time. Yo're not knowing of any place,
       where they could gi' me a trial, away fro' the mills, if I'm such
       a firebrand? I'd take any wage they thought I was worth, for the
       sake of those childer.'
       'Don't you see what you would be? You'd be a knobstick. You'd be
       taking less wages than the other labourers--all for the sake of
       another man's children. Think how you'd abuse any poor fellow who
       was willing to take what he could get to keep his own children.
       You and your Union would soon be down upon him. No! no! if it's
       only for the recollection of the way in which you've used the
       poor knobsticks before now, I say No! to your question. I'll not
       give you work. I won't say, I don't believe your pretext for
       coming and asking for work; I know nothing about it. It may be
       true, or it may not. It's a very unlikely story, at any rate. Let
       me pass. I'll not give you work. There's your answer.'
       'I hear, sir. I would na ha' troubled yo', but that I were bid to
       come, by one as seemed to think yo'd getten some soft place in,
       yo'r heart. Hoo were mistook, and I were misled. But I'm not the
       first man as is misled by a woman.'
       'Tell her to mind her own business the next time, instead of
       taking up your time and mine too. I believe women are at the
       bottom of every plague in this world. Be off with you.'
       'I'm obleeged to yo' for a' yo'r kindness, measter, and most of
       a' for yo'r civil way o' saying good-bye.'
       Mr. Thornton did not deign a reply. But, looking out of the
       window a minute after, he was struck with the lean, bent figure
       going out of the yard: the heavy walk was in strange contrast
       with the resolute, clear determination of the man to speak to
       him. He crossed to the porter's lodge:
       'How long has that man Higgins been waiting to speak to me?'
       'He was outside the gate before eight o'clock, sir. I think he's
       been there ever since.'
       'And it is now--?'
       'Just one, sir.'
       'Five hours,' thought Mr. Thornton; 'it's a long time for a man
       to wait, doing nothing but first hoping and then fearing.' _
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Introduction
CHAPTER I - 'HASTE TO THE WEDDING'
CHAPTER II - ROSES AND THORNS
CHAPTER III - 'THE MORE HASTE THE WORSE SPEED'
CHAPTER IV - DOUBTS AND DIFFICULTIES
CHAPTER V - DECISION
CHAPTER VI - FAREWELL
CHAPTER VII - NEW SCENES AND FACES
CHAPTER VIII - HOME SICKNESS
CHAPTER IX - DRESSING FOR TEA
CHAPTER X - WROUGHT IRON AND GOLD
CHAPTER XI - FIRST IMPRESSIONS
CHAPTER XII - MORNING CALLS
CHAPTER XIII - A SOFT BREEZE IN A SULTRY PLACE
CHAPTER XIV - THE MUTINY
CHAPTER XV - MASTERS AND MEN
CHAPTER XVI - THE SHADOW OF DEATH
CHAPTER XVII - WHAT IS A STRIKE?
CHAPTER XVIII - LIKES AND DISLIKES
CHAPTER XIX - ANGEL VISITS
CHAPTER XX - MEN AND GENTLEMEN
CHAPTER XXI - THE DARK NIGHT
CHAPTER XXII - A BLOW AND ITS CONSEQUENCES
CHAPTER XXIII - MISTAKES
CHAPTER XXIV - MISTAKES CLEARED UP
CHAPTER XXV - FREDERICK
CHAPTER XXVI - MOTHER AND SON
CHAPTER XXVII - FRUIT-PIECE
CHAPTER XXVIII - COMFORT IN SORROW
CHAPTER XXIX - A RAY OF SUNSHINE
CHAPTER XXX - HOME AT LAST
CHAPTER XXXI - 'SHOULD AULD ACQUAINTANCE BE FORGOT?'
CHAPTER XXXII - MISCHANCES
CHAPTER XXXIII - PEACE
CHAPTER XXXIV - FALSE AND TRUE
CHAPTER XXXV - EXPIATION
CHAPTER XXXVI - UNION NOT ALWAYS STRENGTH
CHAPTER XXXVII - LOOKING SOUTH
CHAPTER XXXVIII - PROMISES FULFILLED
CHAPTER XXXIX - MAKING FRIENDS
CHAPTER XL - OUT OF TUNE
CHAPTER XLI - THE JOURNEY'S END
CHAPTER XLII - ALONE! ALONE!
CHAPTER XLIII - MARGARET'S FLITTIN'
CHAPTER XLIV - EASE NOT PEACE
CHAPTER XLV - NOT ALL A DREAM
CHAPTER XLVI - ONCE AND NOW
CHAPTER XLVII - SOMETHING WANTING
CHAPTER XLVIII - 'NE'ER TO BE FOUND AGAIN'
CHAPTER XLIX - BREATHING TRANQUILLITY
CHAPTER L - CHANGES AT MILTON
CHAPTER LI - MEETING AGAIN
CHAPTER LII - 'PACK CLOUDS AWAY'