ply, all the fond and warm recollections of his youth rushed upon
him. He thought, too, how earnestly on her death-bed that wife had
recommended to his vigilant care their only child now weeping on his
bosom: he remembered how, dwelling on that which to all women seems the
grand epoch of life, she had said, "Never let her affections be trifled
with,--never be persuaded by your ambitious brother to make her marry
where she loves not, or to oppose her, without strong reason, where
she does: though she be but a child now, I know enough of her to feel
convinced that if ever she love, she will love too well for her own
happiness, even with all things in her favour." These words, these
recollections, joined to the remembrance of the cold-hearted scheme of
William Brandon, which he had allowed himself to favour, and of his own
supineness towards Lucy's growing love for Clifford, till resistance
became at once necessary and too late, all smote him with a remorseful
sorrow, and fairly sobbing himself, he said, "Thy mother, child! ah,
would that she were living, she would never have neglected thee as I
have done!"
The squire's self-reproach made Lucy's tears cease on the instant;
and as she covered her father's hands with kisses, she replied only
by vehement accusations against herself, and praises of his too great
fatherly fondness and affection. This little burst, on both sides, of
honest and simple-hearted love ended in a silence full of tender and
mingled thoughts; and as Lucy still clung to the breast of the old man,
uncouth as he was in temper, below even mediocrity in intellect, and
altogether the last person in age or mind or habit that seemed fit for a
confidant in the love of a young and enthusiastic girl, she felt the
old homely truth that under all disadvantages there are, in this hollow
world, few in whom trust can be so safely reposed, few who so delicately
and subtilely respect the confidence, as those from whom we spring.
The father and daughter had been silent for some minutes, and the former
was about to speak, when the carriage suddenly stopped. The squire heard
a rough voice at the horses' heads; he looked forth from the window to
see, through the mist of the night, what could possibly be the matter,
and he encountered in this action, just one inch from his forehead, the
protruded and shining barrel of a horse-pistol. We may believe, without
a reflection on his courage, that Mr. Brandon threw himself back in
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