正文 BOOK 5 CHAPTER 1

In the Red Deeps

THE family sittingroom was long room with a window at ead - one looking towards the croft and along the Ripple to the banks of the Floss, the other into the mill-yard. Maggie was sitting with her wainst the latter window when she saw Mr Wakem entering the yard, as usual, on his fine black horse; but not alone, as usual. Some one was with him - a figure in a clock, on a handsome pony. Maggie had hardly time to feel that it hilip e back, before they were in front of the window, and he was raising his hat to her, while his father, catg the movement by a side glance, looked sharply round at them both. Maggie hurried away from the window and carried her work up-stairs; for Mr Wakem sometimes came in and ied the books, and Maggie felt that the meeting with Philip would be robbed of all pleasure in the presence of the two fathers. Some day, perhaps, she should see him when they could just shake hands and she could tell him that she remembered his goodo Tom, and the things he had said to her in the old days, though they could never be friends any more. It was not at all agitating to Maggie to see Philip again: she retained her childish gratitude and pity towards him and remembered his cleverness; and in the early weeks of her loneliness she had tinually recalled the image of him among the people who had been kind to her in life, often wishing she had him for a brother and a teacher, as they had fa might have been, ialk together. But that sort of wishing had been banished along with other dreams that savoured of seeking her own will; and she thought, besides, that Philip might be altered by his life abroad - he might have bee worldly, and really not care about her saying anything to him now. A, his face was wonderfully little altered - it was only a larger, more manly copy of the pale small-featured boys face, with the grey eyes and the boyish waving brown hair; there was the old deformity to awaken the old pity, and after all her meditations, Maggie felt that she really should like to say a few words to him. He might still be melancholy, as he always used to be, and like her to look at him kindly. She wondered if he remembered how he used to like her eyes. With that thought Maggie glaowards the square looking-glass which was o hang with its face towards the wall, and she half-started from her seat to reach it down; but she checked herself and snatched up her work, trying to repress the rising wishes by f her memory to recall snatches of hymns, until she saw Philip and his father returning along the road, and she could go down again.

It was far on in June now, and Maggie was ined to lehe daily walk which was her one indulgence; but this day and the following she was so busy with work which must be fihat she never went beyond the gate, and satisfied her need of the open air by sitting out of doors. One of her frequent walks, when she was not obliged to go to St Oggs, was to a spot that lay beyond what was called the `hill - an insignifit rise of ground ed by trees, lying along the side of the road which ran by the gates of Dorlill. Insignifit, I call it, because i it was hardly more than a bank; - but there may oments when Nature makes a mere bank a means towards a fateful result, and that is why I ask you to imagihis high bank ed with trees, making an uneven wall for some quarter of a mile along the left side of Dorlill and the pleasant fields behind it bounded by the murmuring Ripple. Just where this line of ban

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