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is own shaped itself, to the warm hearth of Twist Tickle and the sleep of a child by night. * * * * * Once I watched him stagger, white and bent with weather and labor, from the ice of Ship's Run, his bag on his back, to the smoking roofs of Twist Tickle, which winter had spread with a snowy blanket and tucked in with anxious hands. 'Twas a bitter day, cold, windy, aswirl with the dust of snow, blinding as a mist. I sat with Judith in the wide, deeply cushioned window-seat of my lib'ry, as my uncle called the comfortable, book-shelved room he had, by advice o' Sir Harry, provided for my youth. John Cather was not about; and I caressed, I recall, the long, slender fingers of her hand, which unfailingly and without hesitation gave themselves to my touch. She would never deny me that, this maid; 'twas only kisses she would hold me from. She would snuggle close and warmly, when John Cather was not about, but would call her God to witness that kisses were prohibited where happiness would continue. "'Tis not _'lowed_, child," says she. Her cheek was so close, so round and soft and delicately tinted, that I touched my lips to it, quite unable to resist. "I don't mind _that_," says she. 'Twas vastly encouraging. "'Twas so brotherly," she added. "Judy," I implored, "I'm in need of another o' that same kind." "No, no!" she cried. "You'd never find the spot!" 'Twas with the maid, then, I sat in the window-seat of my warm room, content with the finger-tips I might touch and kiss as I would, lifted into a mood most holy and aspiring by the weight of her small head upon my shoulder, the bewildering light and mystery of her great, blue eyes, the touch and sweet excitement of her tawny hair, which brushed my cheek, as she well knew, this perverse maid! John Cather was not about, and the maid was yielding, as always in his absence; and I was very happy. 'Twas Moses we observed, all this time, doggedly staggering, upon patriotic duty, from the white, swirling weather of that unkind day, in the Queen's service, his bag on his back. "He've his mother t' guide un," says she. "An' his father?" "'Tis said that he was lost," she answered, "in the Year o' the Big Shore Catch; but I'm knowin' nothin' about that." I remembered the secret Elizabeth would impart to my uncle Nicholas. "_My_ father," says Judith, in challenge, "was a very good man." I was not disposed to de
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