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g him sore," said Polly Ann, with a sigh. I wanted to speak then, but the words would not come. "Whar hev they gone?" said Tom. "To take a walk," said Polly Ann, and laughed. "The gentry has sech fancies as that. Tom, I reckon I'll fly over to Mrs. McCann's an' beg some of that prime bacon she has." Tom picked up his ride, and they went out together. I lay for a long time reflecting. To the strange guests whom Tom in the kindness of his heart had brought back and befriended I gave little attention. I was overwhelmed by the love which had just been revealed to me. And so I was to be educated. It had been in my mind these many years, but I had never spoken of it to Polly Ann. Dear Polly Ann! My eyes filled at the thought that she herself had determined upon this sacrifice. There were footsteps at the door, and these I heard, and heeded not. Then there came a voice,--a woman's voice, modulated and trained in the perfections of speech and in the art of treating things lightly. At the sound of that voice I caught my breath. "What a pastoral! Harry, if we have sought for virtue in the wilderness, we have found it." "When have we ever sought for virtue, Sarah?" It was the man who answered and stirred another chord of my memory. "When, indeed!" said the woman; "'tis a luxury that is denied us, I fear me." "Egad, we have run the gamut, all but that." I thought the woman sighed. "Our hosts are gone out," she said, "bless their simple souls! 'Tis Arcady, Harry, 'where thieves do not break in and steal.' That's Biblical, isn't it?" She paused, and joined in the man's laugh. "I remember--" She stopped abruptly. "Thieves!" said he, "not in our sense. And yet a fortnight ago this sylvan retreat was the scene of murder and sudden death." "Yes, Indians," said the woman; "but they are beaten off and forgotten. Troubles do not last here. Did you see the boy? He's in there, in the corner, getting well of a fearful hacking. Mrs. McChesney says he saved her and her brats." "Ay, McChesney told me," said the man. "Let's have a peep at him." In they came, and I looked on the woman, and would have leaped from my bed had the strength been in me. Superb she was, though her close-fitting travelling gown of green cloth was frayed and torn by the briers, and the beauty of her face enhanced by the marks of I know not what trials and emotions. Little, dark-pencilled lines under the eyes were nigh robbing these of the
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