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e no more," Milburn said. "You have waited longer than I did." His eyes sought his wife's. He added: "Will I ever be more than your husband?" "Yes," said Grandmother Tilghman, with a special effort, "when you wear a hat a young wife is not ashamed of." All felt a cold thrill at these words from the blind woman. Milburn said, gravely, "How can you know about hats, when you cannot see them?" "Oh," said Grandmother, herself a little frightened, "that hat I think I can smell." * * * * * That same night, in Princess Anne, Mrs. Dennis, in her little cottage, undressed herself by a fragment of hearth-fire that now and then flashed upon the picture of her husband, as he had left her sixteen years before, when Levin was a baby--a rich blonde, youthful man, dressed in naval uniform, like Decatur, whose birthplace was so near his own. His golden hair curled upon his forehead, his blue eyes were full of handsome daring, and his red, pouting mouth was like a woman's; upon his arm a corded chapeau was held, epaulettes tasselled his shoulders, his rich blue coat was slashed with gold along the wide lappels, and stood stiffly around his neck and fleecy stock and fan-shaped shirt-ruffles. He seemed to be a mere boy, but of the mettle which made American officers and privateersmen of his days the only guerdons of the republicanism of the seas against the else universal dominion of England. This portrait, the last of her family possessions, was the young sailor's parting gift to her when he sailed in the _Ida_, leaving her a mere girl, with his son upon her breast. The picture hung above the lowly door, the bolt whereof was never fastened in that serene society, and seldom is to this day. Mrs. Dennis knelt upon the bare floor, and raised her branching arms, white as her spirit, to the lover of her youth: "Oh, thou I have adored since God gave me to feel the beauty and strength of man in my childhood, if I have ever looked on man but thee with love or wavering, rebuke me now for the offence I am to do, if such it be, in choosing another father for thy boy!" A low wail seemed to be breathed upon the midnight from somewhere near, and a sick man's cough seemed to break the perfect silence. The widow's hand instinctively covered her bosom as she listened, and, deep in the spirit of her prayer, she continued: "Oh, Bowie, if thou livest, let me know! May I not live to see thee come
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