Sylvia's Lovers — Volume 2 by Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell
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page 13 of 228 (05%)
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a short memory when yo' didn't know me again, and yo' were five
times at this house last winter, and that's not so long sin'. But I suppose yo' see a vast o' things on yo'r voyages by land or by sea, and then it's but natural yo' should forget.' She wished she could go on talking, but could not think of anything more to say just then; for, in the middle of her sentence, the flattering interpretation he might put upon her words, on her knowing so exactly the number of times he had been to Haytersbank, flashed upon her, and she wanted to lead the conversation a little farther afield--to make it a little less personal. This was not his wish, however. In a tone which thrilled through her, even in her own despite, he said,-- 'Do yo' think that can ever happen again, Sylvia?' She was quite silent; almost trembling. He repeated the question as if to force her to answer. Driven to bay, she equivocated. 'What happen again? Let me go, I dunno what yo're talking about, and I'm a'most numbed wi' cold.' For the frosty air came sharp in through the open lattice window, and the ice was already forming on the milk. Kinraid would have found a ready way of keeping his cousins, or indeed most young women, warm; but he paused before he dared put his arm round Sylvia; she had something so shy and wild in her look and manner; and her very innocence of what her words, spoken by another girl, might lead to, inspired him with respect, and kept him in check. So he contented himself with saying,-- |
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