Aylwin eBook

Theodore Watts-Dunton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 645 pages of information about Aylwin.

Aylwin eBook

Theodore Watts-Dunton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 645 pages of information about Aylwin.

‘What do you think the noise was, then?’ said I.

’I don’t know; but I know what I felt as it came shuddering along the sand, and then went wailing over the sea.’

‘What did you feel, Winnie?’

’My heart stood still, for it seemed to me to be the call from the grave.’

’The call from the grave! and pray what is that?  I feel how sadly my education has been neglected.’

’Don’t scoff, Henry.  It is said that when the fate of an old family is at stake, there will sometimes come to him who represents it a call from the grave, and when I saw Snap standing stock still, his hair bristling with terror, I knew that it was no earthly shriek.  I felt sure it was a call from the grave, and I knelt on the sands and prayed.  Henry, Henry, don’t go in the church to-night.’

That Winifred’s words affected me profoundly I need not say.  The shriek, whatever it was, had been responded to by her soul and by mine in the same mysterious way.  But the important thing to do was to prevent her from imagining that her superstitious terrors had affected me.

‘Really, Winnie,’ I said, ’this double-voiced shriek of yours, which is at once the shriek of the Welshman at the bottom of the swollen falls and the Celtic call from the grave, is the most dramatic shriek I ever heard of.  It would make its fortune on the stage.  But with all its power of being the shriek of two different people at once, it must not prevent my going into the church to do my duty; so we had better part here at this very spot.  You go up the cliffs by Needle Point, and I will take Flinty Point gangway.’

‘But why not ascend the cliffs together?’ said Winifred.

’Why, the prying coastguard might be passing, and might wonder to see us in the churchyard on the night of my father’s funeral (he might take us for two ghosts in love, you know).  However, we need not part just yet.  We can walk on a little farther into the cove before our paths diverge.’

Winifred made no demur, though she looked puzzled, as we were then much nearer to the gangway I had selected for myself than to the gangway I had allotted to her.

IX

Winifred and I were in the little horseshoe curve called ’Church Cove,’ but also called sometimes ‘Mousetrap Cove,’ because, as I have already mentioned, a person imprisoned in it by the tide could only escape by means of a boat from the sea.

Needle Point was at one extremity of the cove and Flinty Point at the other.  In front of us, therefore, at the very centre of the cliff that surrounded the cove, was the old church, which I was to reach as soon as possible.  To reach a gangway up the cliff it was necessary to pass quite out of the cove, round either Flinty Point or Needle Point; for the cliff within the cove was perpendicular, and in some parts actually overhanging.

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Project Gutenberg
Aylwin from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.