Cousin Phillis eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 149 pages of information about Cousin Phillis.

Cousin Phillis eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 149 pages of information about Cousin Phillis.

‘That’s right,’ she replied.  ’Only don’t go and make yourself ill by over-work.  I hope you’ll go on with a cup of new milk every morning, for I am sure that is the best medicine; and put a teaspoonful of rum in it, if you like; many a one speaks highly of that, only we had no rum in the house.’  I brought with me an atmosphere of active life which I think he had begun to miss; and it was natural that he should seek my company, after his week of retirement.  Once I saw Phillis looking at us as we talked together with a kind of wistful curiosity; but as soon as she caught my eye, she turned away, blushing deeply.

That evening I had a little talk with the minister.  I strolled along the Hornby road to meet him; for Holdsworth was giving Phillis an Italian lesson, and cousin Holman had fallen asleep over her work.  Somehow, and not unwillingly on my part, our talk fell on the friend whom I had introduced to the Hope Farm.

‘Yes!  I like him!’ said the minister, weighing his words a little as he spoke.  ’I like him.  I hope I am justified in doing it, but he takes hold of me, as it were; and I have almost been afraid lest he carries me away, in spite of my judgment.’

‘He is a good fellow; indeed he is,’ said I.  ’My father thinks well of him; and I have seen a deal of him.  I would not have had him come here if I did not know that you would approve of him.’

‘Yes,’ (once more hesitating,) ’I like him, and I think he is an upright man; there is a want of seriousness in his talk at times, but, at the same time, it is wonderful to listen to him!  He makes Horace and Virgil living, instead of dead, by the stories he tells me of his sojourn in the very countries where they lived, and where to this day, he says—­But it is like dram-drinking.  I listen to him till I forget my duties, and am carried off my feet.  Last Sabbath evening he led us away into talk on profane subjects ill befitting the day.’  By this time we were at the house, and our conversation stopped.  But before the day was out, I saw the unconscious hold that my friend had got over all the family.  And no wonder:  he had seen so much and done so much as compared to them, and he told about it all so easily and naturally, and yet as I never heard any one else do; and his ready pencil was out in an instant to draw on scraps of paper all sorts of illustrations—­modes of drawing up water in Northern Italy, wine-carts, buffaloes, stone-pines, I know not what.  After we had all looked at these drawings, Phillis gathered them together, and took them.  It is many years since I have seen thee, Edward Holdsworth, but thou wast a delightful fellow!  Ay, and a good one too; though much sorrow was caused by thee!

PART III

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Project Gutenberg
Cousin Phillis from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.