Foes by Mary Johnston
page 43 of 352 (12%)
page 43 of 352 (12%)
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the dressed and festive following, stepped from the kirkyard to some
waiting carts and horses. The most mounted and took place, the procession put itself into motion with clatter and laughter. The children and boys ran after to where the road dipped over the hill. A cluster of village folk turned the long, descending street. In passing they spoke to Alexander and Ian. "Who was married?--Jock Wilson and Janet Macraw, o' Langmuir." The two lounged against the kirkyard wall, beneath the yews. "_Marry!_ That's a strange, terrible, useless word to me!" "I don't know...." "Yes, it is!... Ian, do you ever think that you've lived before?" "I don't know. I'm living now!" "Well, I think that we all lived before. I think that the same things happen again--" "Well, let them--some of them!" said Ian. "Come along, if we're going through the glen." They left the kirkyard for the village street. Here they sauntered, friends with the whole. They looked in at the tavern upon the drovers, they watched the blacksmith and his helper. The red iron rang, the sparks flew. At the foot of the hill flowed the stream and stood the mill. The wheel turned, the water diamonds dropped in sheets. Their |
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