North and South eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 692 pages of information about North and South.

North and South eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 692 pages of information about North and South.

CHAPTER XXXI

‘Should Auld acquaintance be forgot?’

’Show not that manner, and these features all,
The serpent’s cunning, and the sinner’s fall?’
Crabbe.

The chill, shivery October morning came; not the October morning of the country, with soft, silvery mists, clearing off before the sunbeams that bring out all the gorgeous beauty of colouring, but the October morning of Milton, whose silver mists were heavy fogs, and where the sun could only show long dusky streets when he did break through and shine.  Margaret went languidly about, assisting Dixon in her task of arranging the house.  Her eyes were continually blinded by tears, but she had no time to give way to regular crying.  The father and brother depended upon her; while they were giving way to grief, she must be working, planning, considering.  Even the necessary arrangements for the funeral seemed to devolve upon her.

When the fire was bright and crackling—­when everything was ready for breakfast, and the tea-kettle was singing away, Margaret gave a last look round the room before going to summon Mr. Hale and Frederick.  She wanted everything to look as cheerful as possible; and yet, when it did so, the contrast between it and her own thoughts forced her into sudden weeping.  She was kneeling by the sofa, hiding her face in the cushions that no one might hear her cry, when she was touched on the shoulder by Dixon.

’Come, Miss Hale—­come, my dear!  You must not give way, or where shall we all be?  There is not another person in the house fit to give a direction of any kind, and there is so much to be done.  There’s who’s to manage the funeral; and who’s to come to it; and where it’s to be; and all to be settled:  and Master Frederick’s like one crazed with crying, and master never was a good one for settling; and, poor gentleman, he goes about now as if he was lost.  It’s bad enough, my dear, I know; but death comes to us all; and you’re well off never to have lost any friend till now.’Perhaps so.  But this seemed a loss by itself; not to bear comparison with any other event in the world.  Margaret did not take any comfort from what Dixon said, but the unusual tenderness of the prim old servant’s manner touched her to the heart; and, more from a desire to show her gratitude for this than for any other reason, she roused herself up, and smiled in answer to Dixon’s anxious look at her; and went to tell her father and brother that breakfast was ready.

Mr. Hale came—­as if in a dream, or rather with the unconscious motion of a sleep-walker, whose eyes and mind perceive other things than what are present.  Frederick came briskly in, with a forced cheerfulness, grasped her hand, looked into her eyes, and burst into tears.  She had to try and think of little nothings to say all breakfast-time, in order to prevent the recurrence of her companions’ thoughts too strongly to the last meal they bad taken together, when there had been a continual strained listening for some sound or signal from the sick-room.

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Project Gutenberg
North and South from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.